Norman Mailer RIP

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Norman Mailer, American Author, Dies at 84, AP Reports
By Dan Hart

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Norman Mailer, the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning U.S. author known for works such as ``The Naked and the Dead'' and ``The Armies of the Night,'' died early today at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan, the Associated Press reported. He was 84.

His death from renal failure was confirmed by his literary executor, J. Michael Lennon, AP said.

m coleman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 13:39 (sixteen years ago) link

fug

m coleman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 13:40 (sixteen years ago) link

A real American asshole; he made being an asshole into an artform. RIP.

G00blar, Saturday, 10 November 2007 13:43 (sixteen years ago) link

The film of Tough Guys Don't Dance is inexplicable psuedo-art like very little else. For that reason alone, RIP, and I hope he's dumped over the side of a boat near Cape Cod to the strains of "Pomp and Circumstance" after Penn Gilette loudly slept with his latest paramour.

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 10 November 2007 13:56 (sixteen years ago) link

Next: Gore Vidal and John Updike. Then we can say The Novel Has Died.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 10 November 2007 14:22 (sixteen years ago) link

Oh, pshaw.

G00blar, Saturday, 10 November 2007 14:24 (sixteen years ago) link

I don't suppose he finished that Harlot's Ghost sequel. Bugger.

Noodle Vague, Saturday, 10 November 2007 14:55 (sixteen years ago) link

he made being an asshole into an artform

there is an glimmer of insight here, mailer was arguably the first author-as-celebrity of the post WW2 era. unfortunately his blowhard public persona came to overshadow his writing, this is one reason his post-1970s novels are so bloated/over-ambitious. he's not read so much anymore but his influence looms large: not so much in fiction as non-fiction. co-founder of the Village Voice and pioneer of personal journalism, he paved the way for successive generations of young writers, many of whom have probably never read him. too bad.

m coleman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:18 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, I was being slightly facetious, but it's sort of what he did best--provoked, opposed, stirred up, and, early on, gave some voice to a whole discontented section of the populace. I've never caught on to his fiction, but alot of the "new journalist" stuff is indeed great.

G00blar, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:29 (sixteen years ago) link

naked/dead, armies of the night, tough guys, american dream, executioner's song. all good stuff. those books will hopefully outlast the persona of blowhard's blowhard.

scott seward, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:35 (sixteen years ago) link

m coleman, G00blar, and Alfred OTM.And you, too Ned.

I'm trying decide if he aged gracefully or not.

RIP.

Dandy Don Weiner, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:37 (sixteen years ago) link

http://img.timeinc.net/Life/space/covers/cv082969.jpg

scott seward, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:38 (sixteen years ago) link

cocky bastard

scott seward, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:39 (sixteen years ago) link

after his recording session with rick rubin:

http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/images/2007/10/17/image3378277.jpg

scott seward, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:39 (sixteen years ago) link

aw. love love love Armies of the Night. RIP

horseshoe, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:47 (sixteen years ago) link

search: The Naked & The Dead, Advertisements For Myself, Armies of the Night, Of A Fire On The Moon, The Executioner's Song.

my friend who's a diehard Mailerite wrote his college thesis on An American Dream and still calls that Norm's best novel but I've always thought it was Mailer at his macho worst.

Lately I've been reinvestigating the whole Jack Henry Abbott affair for a project of my own, even more than the death of John Lennon I think that was the end of 60s liberal idealism. probably Mailer's low point.

m coleman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 15:55 (sixteen years ago) link

he paved the way for successive generations of young writers, many of whom have probably never read him. too bad.

otm x 1000.

Just saw the guy speak a couple months ago. Arrogant and funny. RIP.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 10 November 2007 16:47 (sixteen years ago) link

NEW YORK (AP) -- Norman Mailer, the macho prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country's literary conscience and provocateur with such books as "The Naked and the Dead," died Saturday, his literary executor said. He was 84.

Mailer died of acute renal failure at Mount Sinai Hospital, said J. Michael Lennon, who is also the author's official biographer.

From his classic debut novel to such masterworks of literary journalism as "The Armies of the Night," the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner always got credit for insight, passion and originality.

Some of his works were highly praised, some panned, but none was pronounced the Great American Novel that seemed to be his life quest from the time he soared to the top as a brash 25-year-old "enfant terrible."

Mailer built and nurtured an image over the years as pugnacious, streetwise and high-living. He drank, fought, smoked pot, married six times and stabbed his second wife, almost fatally, during a drunken party.

He had nine children, made a quixotic bid to become mayor of New York, produced five forgettable films, dabbled in journalism, flew gliders, challenged professional boxers, was banned from a Manhattan YWHA for reciting obscene poetry, feuded publicly with writer Gore Vidal and crusaded against women's lib.

But as Newsweek reviewer Raymond Sokolov said in 1968, "in the end it is the writing that will count."

Mailer, he wrote, possessed "a superb natural style that does not crack under the pressures he puts upon it, a talent for narrative and characters with real blood streams and nervous systems, a great openness and eagerness for experience, a sense of urgency about the need to test thought and character in the crucible of a difficult era."

Norman Mailer was born Jan. 31, 1923 in Long Branch, N.J. His father, Isaac, a South Africa-born accountant, and mother, Fanny, who ran a housekeeping and nursing agency, soon moved to Brooklyn -- later described by Mailer as "the most secure Jewish environment in America."

Mailer completed public schools, earned an engineering science degree in 1943 from Harvard, where he decided to become a writer, and was soon drafted into the Army. Sent to the Philippines as an infantryman, he saw enough of Army life and combat to provide a basis for his first book, "The Naked and the Dead," published in 1948 while he was a post-graduate student in Paris on the G.I. Bill.

The book -- noteworthy for Mailer's invention of the word "fug" as a substitute for the then-unacceptable four-letter original -- was a best-seller, and Mailer returned home to find himself anointed the new Hemingway, Dos Passos and Melville.

Buoyed by instant literary celebrity, Mailer embraced the early 1950s counterculture -- defining "hip" in his essay "The White Negro," allying himself with Beat Generation gurus Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, and writing social and political commentary for the leftist Village Voice, which he helped found. He also churned out two more novels, "Barbary Shore" (1951) and "Deer Park" (1955), neither embraced kindly by readers or critics.

Mailer turned reporter to cover the 1960 Democratic Party convention for Esquire and later claimed, with typical hubris, that his piece, "Superman Comes to the Supermarket," had made the difference in John F. Kennedy's razor-thin margin of victory over Republican Richard M. Nixon.

While Life magazine called his next book, "An American Dream" (1965), "the big comeback of Norman Mailer," the author-journalist was chronicling major events of the day: an anti-war march on Washington, the 1968 political conventions, the Ali-Patterson fight, an Apollo moon shot.

His 1968 account of the peace march on the Pentagon, "The Armies of the Night," won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. He was described as the only person over 40 trusted by the flower generation.

Covering the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago for Harper's magazine, Mailer was torn between keeping to a tight deadline or joining the anti-war protests that led to a violent police crackdown. "I was in a moral quandary. I didn't know if I was being scared or being professional," he later testified in the trial of the so-called Chicago Seven.

In 1999, "The Armies of the Night" was listed at No. 19 on a New York University survey of 100 examples of the best journalism of the century.

Mailer's personal life was as turbulent as the times. In 1960, at a party at his Brooklyn Heights home, Mailer stabbed his second wife, Adele Morales, with a knife. She declined to press charges, and it was not until 1997 that she revealed, in her own book, how close she had come to dying.

In 1969, Mailer ran for mayor on a "left conservative" platform. He said New York City should become the 51st state, and urged a referendum for "black ghetto dwellers" on whether they should set up their own government.

Mailer had numerous minor run-ins with the law, usually for being drunk or disorderly, but was also jailed briefly during the Pentagon protests. While directing the film "Maidstone" in 1968, the self-described "old club fighter" punched actor Lane Smith, breaking his jaw, and bit actor Rip Torn's ear in another scuffle.

Years later, he championed the work of a convict-writer named Jack Abbott -- and was subjected to ridicule and criticism when Abbott, released to a halfway house, promptly stabbed a man to death.

Mailer had views on almost everything.

The '70s: "the decade in which image became preeminent because nothing deeper was going on."

Poetry: A "natural activity ... a poem comes to one," whereas prose required making "an appointment with one's mind to write a few thousand words."

Journalism: irresponsible. "You can't be too certain about what happened."

Technology: "insidious, debilitating and depressing," and nobody in politics had an answer to "its impact on our spiritual well-being."

Mailer's suspicion of technology was so deep that while most writers used typewriters or computers, he wrote with a pen, some 1,500 words a day, in what Newsweek's Sokolov called "an illegible and curving hand." When a stranger asked him on a Brooklyn street if he wrote on a computer, he replied, "No, I never learned that," then added, in a mischevious aside, "but my girl does."

In a 1971 magazine piece about the new women's liberation movement, Mailer equated the dehumanizing effect of technology with what he said was feminists' need to abolish the mystery, romance and "blind, goat-kicking lust" from sex.

Time magazine said the broadside should "earn him a permanent niche in their pantheon of male chauvinist pigs." Mailer later told an interviewer that his being called sexist was "the greatest injustice in American life."

Two years later, he wrote "Marilyn" and was accused of plagiarism by other Marilyn Monroe biographers. One, Maurice Zolotow, called it "one of the literary heists of the century." Mailer shot back, "nobody calls me a plagiarist and gets away with it," adding that if he was going to steal, it would be from Shakespeare or Melville.

In "Advertisements for Myself" (1959), Mailer promised to write the greatest novel yet, but later conceded he had not.

Among other notable works: "Cannibals and Christians" (1966); "Why Are We in Vietnam?" (1967); and "Miami and the Siege of Chicago" (1968), an account of the two political conventions that year.

"The Executioner's Song" (1979), an epic account of the life and death of petty criminal Gary Gilmore, whom Mailer never met, won the 1980 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. "Ancient Evenings" (1983), a novel of ancient Egypt that took 11 years to complete, was critically panned.

"Tough Guys Don't Dance" (1984) became a 1987 film. Some critics found "Harlot's Ghost" (1991), a novel about the CIA, surprisingly sympathetic to the cold warriors, considering Mailer's left-leaning past. In 1997, he came out with "The Gospel According to the Son," a novel told from Jesus Christ's point of view. The following year, he marked his 75th birthday with the epic-length anthology "The Time of Our Time."

Mailer's wives, besides Morales, were Beatrice Silverman; Lady Jeanne Campbell; Beverly Bentley; actress Carol Stevens and painter Norris Church. He had five daughters, three sons and a stepson.

Mailer lived for decades in the Brooklyn Heights townhouse with a view of New York harbor and lower Manhattan from the rooftop "crow's nest," and kept a beachside home in Provincetown, Mass., where he spent increasing time in his later years.

Despite heart surgery, hearing loss and arthritic knees that forced him to walk with canes, Mailer retained his enthusiasm for writing and in early 2007 released "The Castle in the Forest," a novel about Hitler's early years, narrated by an underling of Satan. A book of conversations about the cosmos, "On God," came out in the fall.

In 2005, Mailer received a gold medal for lifetime achievement at the National Book Awards, where he deplored what he called the "withering" of general interest in the "serious novel."

Authors like himself, he said more than once, had become anachronisms as people focused on television and young writers aspired to screenwriting or journalism.

When he was young, Mailer said, "fiction was everything. The novel, the big novel, the driving force. We all wanted to be Hemingway ... I don't think the same thing can be said anymore. I don't think my work has inspired any writer, not the way Hemingway inspired me."

m coleman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 17:06 (sixteen years ago) link

young writers aspired to screenwriting or journalism.

Is this true?

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 10 November 2007 17:11 (sixteen years ago) link

RIP. I suppose I should get round to reading some of his books now.

Matt DC, Saturday, 10 November 2007 17:56 (sixteen years ago) link

The proof that he was the first modern celebrity author is I've never read a single book of his. Think I'll start w/ Armies of the Night.

Harlot' Ghost is still on shelf today in Brooklyn library, about 20 feet from his pic on the wall.

Dr Morbius, Saturday, 10 November 2007 18:45 (sixteen years ago) link

Armies of the Night is fantastic and all about his celebrity in a way. He is very endearing in it.

horseshoe, Saturday, 10 November 2007 19:45 (sixteen years ago) link

it is also prescient about our current political moment which is a little painful to read.

horseshoe, Saturday, 10 November 2007 19:47 (sixteen years ago) link

Executioner's Song really is fantastic - especially love the lengthy autopsy sequence near the end of the book that reminded me of the lengthy autopsy sequence near the end of Albert Goldman's Elvis bio - tho I suspect that may have a lot to do w/ all the research/access that came from Mailer's collaborator/business partner Lawrence Schiller (Schiller's Perfect Murder, Perfect Town (abt JonBenet Ramsey) and his book on the OJ Simpson trial are two of my v. favourite true crime bks). Mailer, always in competition, obv. had one eye/mind on Capote's In Cold Blood, but I think Executioner's Song is the better bk - less sentimental/gratuitously poetic, less enamoured of crims (ironic considering the Abbot biz), and keenly sympathetic (surprisingly) to the women in Gilmore's life.

Ward Fowler, Saturday, 10 November 2007 20:10 (sixteen years ago) link

RIP

http://gilmoregirls.serialy.info/images/herci/ine_slavne_tvare/norman_mailer.jpg

Gukbe, Saturday, 10 November 2007 21:48 (sixteen years ago) link

Aw damn, RIP.

Rock Hardy, Saturday, 10 November 2007 22:56 (sixteen years ago) link

I am 53. You would thinnk he would appeal to someone who was nearer to his own age and epoch. I have never read Mailer, so he might be a fabulous, fantastic, moving writer of great excellence and I would not know it.

His death is very little different to me than the death of any other well-known person who has not touched my life. I am sorry for those who loved him. That does not include me. RIP, Norman.

Aimless, Sunday, 11 November 2007 02:39 (sixteen years ago) link

You lived it, Norm.

collardio gelatinous, Sunday, 11 November 2007 04:58 (sixteen years ago) link

I read one of his Esquire pieces from the '60s last night. Say what you want about his ego, at least the guy was not boring. His writing snaps and crackles.

o. nate, Monday, 12 November 2007 17:49 (sixteen years ago) link

If only there were more people writing about politics with a novelist's eye like Mailer's these days:

"Superman Comes to the Supermarket"

http://web.archive.org/web/20030910061551/www.esquire.com/features/articles/2003/031001_mfe_mailer_1.html

o. nate, Monday, 12 November 2007 18:07 (sixteen years ago) link

I think of Mailer as almost being, like, America's version of Cyril Connolly: both men never really wrote the Next Great Novel they were anointed to write as young men, and both men introduced a new sort of intellectual archetype who would epitomize the opinions of the age who came after him.

Cunga, Tuesday, 13 November 2007 06:02 (sixteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

One last honor.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 20:23 (sixteen years ago) link

The winning passage, which leaves little to the imagination, begins: "So Klara turned head to foot and put her most unmentionable part down on his hard-breathing nose and mouth and took his old battering ram into her lips."

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 20:23 (sixteen years ago) link

old battering ram = National Book Award?

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 20:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Here's the infamous brawl with Rip Torn, who looks like he's eaten a lot of Ho-Hos since then:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5XU4jpnJWFY

dally, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 22:02 (sixteen years ago) link

seven years pass...

has anyone read harlot's ghost?

2 things i wanna know

is it great?
and
do u need to know a lot about the CIA to get it?

flopson, Thursday, 8 October 2015 23:35 (eight years ago) link

yes, sort of, no

the late great, Friday, 9 October 2015 01:04 (eight years ago) link

Yes. His best novel. When I read it, I finally found the novel equiv of JFK.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 9 October 2015 01:07 (eight years ago) link

yeah, his magnum opus.

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Friday, 9 October 2015 01:50 (eight years ago) link

it is certainly good, i'm just not sure it justifies its length

the late great, Friday, 9 October 2015 03:31 (eight years ago) link

iirc i read it between ellroy's "cold six thousand" and "gravity's rainbow" ... it was a paranoid summer

the late great, Friday, 9 October 2015 06:00 (eight years ago) link

Been dipping into his Apollo book, Of a Fire on the Moon, as mentioned on this thread: DSKY-DSKY Him Sad: Official ILB Thread For The Heroic Age of Manned Spaceflight. It's a really great subject for him. Fantastic evocation of the era and speculation of the significance of certain events and behaviors and what might come next. Really nice set pieces, like the comparison of the personalities and speaking styles of the three Apollo 11 astronauts.

Take 36, Where Are You? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 12 October 2015 02:40 (eight years ago) link

Note: don't think any of us on the other thread had actually gotten around to reading it yet so maybe I should have posted there first.

Take 36, Where Are You? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 12 October 2015 02:41 (eight years ago) link


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