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“I am the only major writer in America who has had more bad reviews than good reviews in the course of his writing life,” Mailer once told an interviewer. “So that gives me a certain pride, you know. I feel they keep taking their best shot, and they’re ... not going to stop me, ya know.”
There are many fine remembrances being either published or broadcast today of Norman Mailer, the runty New Jersey kid who grew up to be a giant of his craft, and there will no doubt be considerably more to come in the next week. (One of the best so far is Lynn Neary’s segment this morning on National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Saturday.) Yet the greatest tribute to Mailer is the endurance of his literary efforts. His writing will outlive him by a longshot, which is just what every author wants for his or her own work.
READ MORE: “Norman Mailer: Death of an Icon” (Guardian Unlimited); “Remembering Norman Mailer Through His Books,” by A.O. Scott (Salon); “Norman Mailer, Towering Writer With Matching Ego, Is Dead,” by Charles McGrath (The New York Times); “Mailer Made America His Subject,” by Michiko Kakutani (The New York Times); “Literary Giant Norman Mailer Dies at 84,” by Mark Feeney (The Boston Globe); “Remembrances: Norman Mailer, 1923-2007,” compiled by Dana Cook (Salon); “Norman Mailer, 1923-2007,” by John Freeman (Critical Mass); “Norman Mailer Memorial” (The Huffington Post); “Norman Mailer,” by Louis Menand (The New Yorker); “Norman Mailed Brawled with Bush to the Bitter End,” by John Nichols (The Nation); “Stormin’ Norman,” by Gregory Kirschling (Entertainment Weekly).
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http://rapidshare.com/files/71320014/Norman_Mailer_-_The_Prisoner_of_Sex.pdf
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