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Andre Deutsch, November 4, 1963: Difference between revisions

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Dear Andre,<ref> The explanation of the relationship of Scott Meredith, Cy Rembar and Mailer provided in this letter is a response to the anxiety Deutsch conveyed in a 24 October letter about Meredith’s methods and Mailer’s two weeks of silence. ''Barbary Shore'' (1951) was Mailer’s second novel. The parenthetical reference to the title of the ''Esquire'' novel is one of the first in a letter. He mentions it again in the next letter to Alan Earney. Mailer met Jeanne Johnson when he was in Bellevue; he introduced her to Paul Krassner, editor of The ''Realist''.<ref>
Dear Andre,<ref>The explanation of the relationship of Scott Meredith, Cy Rembar and Mailer provided in this letter is a response to the anxiety Deutsch conveyed in a 24 October letter about Meredith’s methods and Mailer’s two weeks of silence. ''Barbary Shore'' (1951) was Mailer’s second novel. The parenthetical reference to the title of the ''Esquire'' novel is one of the first in a letter. He mentions it again in the next letter to Alan Earney. Mailer met Jeanne Johnson when he was in Bellevue; he introduced her to Paul Krassner, editor of The ''Realist''.</ref>


This is just a note to say that we must not have any trouble or misunderstanding between us. Scott Meredith is a top money agent, and can get advances like nobody else I’ve ever known in the literary world, but some of his methods I suppose can seem fairly strong-arm if one is on the receiving end, so I’m writing this to tell you that all final decisions on everything are still being made by Cy [Rembar] and me. As you may remember my telling you once in Cy’s office just before we got together again, I had a bad conscience toward you about ''Barbary Shore'' and have no desire to get into that again. So look, Andre, and straight: I wish as a working rule of procedure that you will assume things are going well between us unless you hear directly to the contrary from Cy or me. If our silences are sometimes long, it is because the variety of work one is engaged in creates the delay. The last letter I wrote to you must have been in my mind for a month, but I was desperately at work on the first installment and did not want to take the chance of breaking a writing day by starting it with a letter. By the time I was done for the day I usually felt too drained to dictate something coherent. The delay which took on, under the circumstances, a large significance to you really had none for me.
This is just a note to say that we must not have any trouble or misunderstanding between us. Scott Meredith is a top money agent, and can get advances like nobody else I’ve ever known in the literary world, but some of his methods I suppose can seem fairly strong-arm if one is on the receiving end, so I’m writing this to tell you that all final decisions on everything are still being made by Cy [Rembar] and me. As you may remember my telling you once in Cy’s office just before we got together again, I had a bad conscience toward you about ''Barbary Shore'' and have no desire to get into that again. So look, Andre, and straight: I wish as a working rule of procedure that you will assume things are going well between us unless you hear directly to the contrary from Cy or me. If our silences are sometimes long, it is because the variety of work one is engaged in creates the delay. The last letter I wrote to you must have been in my mind for a month, but I was desperately at work on the first installment and did not want to take the chance of breaking a writing day by starting it with a letter. By the time I was done for the day I usually felt too drained to dictate something coherent. The delay which took on, under the circumstances, a large significance to you really had none for me.
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