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The Mailer Review/Volume 2, 2008/Fighters and Writers: Difference between revisions

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{{Byline|last=Rodwan Jr.|first=John G.|abstract=A banner hanging on a wall at Gleason’s Gym testifies to boxing’s enduring appeal for writers. Norman {{NM}} and José Torres (light heavyweight champion and author) were friends, and Mailer admitted to providing editorial aid to the fighter, who did give the novelist some boxing pointers. Mailer did share his friend’s views about pugilistic trickery. In his 1975 account of the Ali-Foreman fight, Mailer explicitly invokes the D’Amato-Torres philosophy, a key component of which is that skilled boxers can block or evade any punch they can see coming.
{{Byline|last=Rodwan Jr.|first=John G.|abstract=A banner hanging on a wall at Gleason’s Gym testifies to boxing’s enduring appeal for writers. Norman {{NM}} and José Torres (light heavyweight champion and author) were friends, and Mailer admitted to providing editorial aid to the fighter, who did give the novelist some boxing pointers. Mailer did share his friend’s views about pugilistic trickery. In his 1975 account of the Ali-Foreman fight, Mailer explicitly invokes the D’Amato-Torres philosophy, a key component of which is that skilled boxers can block or evade any punch they can see coming.
|url=https://prmlr.us/mr08rodw}}
|url=https://prmlr.us/mr02rod}}


{{cquote|At Corinth two temples stood side by side, the temple of Violence and the temple of Necessity.|author=Albert Camus|source=“The Minotaur” (1939)}}
{{cquote|At Corinth two temples stood side by side, the temple of Violence and the temple of Necessity.|author=Albert Camus|source=“The Minotaur” (1939)}}