11.11.07

Tough guys don't dance. You had better believe it. - Norm Mailer

Norman Mailer,died Saturday. Norman Mailer, who burst on the literary scene in 1948 and published his most recent book just last month, died Saturday at the age of 84. Co-founder of the Village Voice, the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes and the National Book Award, he was nonetheless a controversial figure who lived life large.

Indeed, though Mailer has been called one of the greatest writers of his generation, he has also been vilified as an egotistical buffoon who never lived up to the potential he showed in his debut — The Naked and the Dead, a World War II novel based in part on his own experiences as an Army infantryman.



Mailer's second novel, Barbary Shore, was panned by critics. Several publishers rejected his third, Deer Park, and when it finally saw print, it met with mixed reviews. It was a pattern that would continue throughout his career, but as Mailer told Terry Gross in a 1991 Fresh Air interview, he never let his critics get the best of him.

"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 said. "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."

The Writer as Celebrity

Mailer always wanted to be taken seriously as a writer. But his private life often got as much attention as his prose. Married six times, he was jailed briefly in 1960 for stabbing his second wife, Adele Mailer. And his feuds with fellow writers, including William Styron, Truman Capote and Gore Vidal, were infamous. Biographer Mary Dearborn says Mailer was one of the first true celebrity writers.

"This is somebody who aggressively sought out fame," Dearborn says. "He understood the politics of celebrity before anyone else did. The person comparable is Hemingway — who also had celebrity thrust upon him and then came to embrace it."

Mailer always thought of himself as a novelist, but he may have made a more enduring mark as an essayist and journalist. A co-founder of The Village Voice, New York City's fabled alternative newsweekly, he helped invent a new journalistic form: creative nonfiction, which applied the narrative style of the novel to real events.

A political activist during the Vietnam War era, Mailer ran unsuccessfully for mayor of New York in 1969. And he used his own political activism as a source for his books, especially Armies of the Night, about the 1967 March on the Pentagon, and Miami and the Siege of Chicago, about the 1968 political conventions.

Both books were well received — Armies of the Night, in fact, won both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize.

A Cultural Critic, Oft Criticized

Mailer won his second Pulitzer for The Executioners Song, which he described as a "true-life novel" about Gary Gilmore, the first man executed in the U.S. after the reinstitution of the death penalty. Phillip Sipiora, editor of The Mailer Review, says that ultimately Mailer is best understood as a cultural commentator.

"He's always been at the center of a number of cultural storms and issues," Sipiora says. "He engaged the feminist movement in the '60s and '70s. He's been a prolific sports commentator. He's also been a critic of contemporary fiction forms. So in that sense, he's been very influential in a cultural way."

Conflict seemed to be at the core of Mailer's life and his work. Whether writing about war, murder or boxing, he seemed fascinated by the idea of violence But if critics sometimes found this fascination excessive, Mailer never apologized for pursuing life with a vengeance. Everything, he told Fresh Air's Terry Gross, was fodder for his writing.

"You know, if you're just bookish, there's a tendency to get terribly bitter about people who are physical," Mailer said. "My feeling from the beginning always was, if you are going to be a novelist, I've got to be a novelist who can encompass all kinds of experience. Don't ever narrow down the horizons of what you want to write about."

22.10.07

You need a guide book to find my ass...

From a friend in CA. She was a good one. Damn...I digress...she sent me this as she prepared to take a december trip to the Kingdom! check it out:



soo i was flipping through a lonely planet book for thailand when i came across the music section. amongst the popular artists listed was one that struck a familiar, but distant chord. "Joey Boy". why in the world would i know them... it all came rushing back, action figure and all.

that inspired me to you tube joey boy, and after a little searching i was able to find a video featuring the rockstar i once knew and loved, you.




28.8.07

NEWS FLASH! THIS JUST IN:

Germans getting smaller and smaller. In am un-related story; Motorcycles stay same size. News at Eleven.



21.8.07

whoa!

Like I said..Whoa. Check it out HERE

20.8.07

Just a fu*k'in Shame...

Go visit my other blog **I could totally live in that** for more info on this travesty!!

14.8.07

The ole'Family Jalopy..is Beautiful!

**D i have added about 10 more pics for ya...thats the trunk handel below
growing into a tree trunk...lets let it stay where it be! Lets talk about the LTD
thought!!***'


















































We do however need a chain-saw to get it out of its present parking spot...got one handy?


Ours is a 40 buick I think this may be a 37-39 vintage but its similar



















Located on the Island of Ocaracoke NC (sp?)