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Dear Vance,<ref>{{NM}}’s letter to [[w:Vance Bourjaily|Vance Bourjaily]]. The novelist Vance Bourjaily (1924-) met Mailer in New York in 1951 and introduced him to several writers. Theodor Reik (1888-1976), the American psychologist, was an early and brilliant acolyte of Sigmund Freud (1856-1939.</ref> | Dear Vance,<ref>{{NM}}’s letter to [[w:Vance Bourjaily|Vance Bourjaily]]. The novelist [[w:Vance Bourjaily|VanceBourjaily]] (1924-) met Mailer in New York in 1951 and introduced him to several writers. [[w:Theodor Reik|Theodor Reik]] (1888-1976), the American psychologist, was an early and brilliant acolyte of [[w:Sigmund Freud|Sigmund Freud]] (1856-1939.</ref> | ||
The serial business is excellent for straightening out one’s life, since there’s no time to do anything but work. Years ago, [[w:Theodor Reik|Theordor Reik]] was being analyzed by [Sigmund] Freud, and as a talented young man he was naturally interested not only in being a superb analyst but a musician, a writer, a lover, a boulevardier, a vigilante, even a mad genius. Freud listened and got angrier and angrier. Finally he said, “Reik, you want to be a big man? Piss in one spot.” So that is what the serial business puts you up to. | The serial business is excellent for straightening out one’s life, since there’s no time to do anything but work. Years ago, [[w:Theodor Reik|Theordor Reik]] was being analyzed by [Sigmund] Freud, and as a talented young man he was naturally interested not only in being a superb analyst but a musician, a writer, a lover, a boulevardier, a vigilante, even a mad genius. Freud listened and got angrier and angrier. Finally he said, “Reik, you want to be a big man? Piss in one spot.” So that is what the serial business puts you up to. |
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