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Except for USA Today, the news source for optimists, most papers don’t hold back on who Norman Mailer was when he was alive. (Or if they are holding back, he must have been a real creep.)
New Yorker:
It is important to acknowledge, though, that he was a singularly bad performer. He entertained and he instructed, but he also irritated, alienated, baffled, and appalled. He told dirty jokes that were not funny, and he tried on outfits and accents that were preposterous—a Jewish boy from Brooklyn, he sometimes dressed like a sea captain and affected a Texas drawl—and he had a few moments, deservedly notorious, of disastrous misjudgment.
Los Angeles Times:
He was a major talent who could not keep himself from reminding you that he was a major talent, an astute observer of his moment, who tended to operate as if that moment were entirely his … It’s been said that no other major American author wrote so many bad books.
Slate:
No great writer—and he was, at his best, as great as he said he was—ever wrote quite as much crap.
Boston Globe:
Many of his books, quickly written for money or attention or both, do not stand out at all. Or they do so for the wrong reasons. His 1983 novel, “Ancient Evenings,” remains one of the great debacles in 20th-century literature.
New York Post tribute by Gay Talese:
He was a man who never said no. He never said no to anything. I saw him quoted in some hardcore porno magazine 20 years ago and I thought, ‘God, there’s nobody he won’t talk to’ - there’s Norman Mailer in Hustler magazine, Penthouse magazine, as well as the Paris Review.
Sometimes reading excellent/great writing takes sitzfleisch. What can I say?
Maybe, even frequently?
Frequently.
Another vote here for Harlot's Ghost. Blast the man for having the temerity to die before writing the sequel!
I haven't read any of his novels. Does anyone have any suggestions? I know his bestselling ones are Into the Mirror: The Life of Master Spy Robert P. Hanssen, The Naked & the Dead, and The Executioner's Song. But are those his best?
Thanks guys!