Archivist, Biographer, Educator

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The Essential JFK Books

Not only is Norman Mailer’s Oswald’s Tale the first mentioned, but Mike is quoted:

Mailer disappointed numerous conspiracy theorists by coming to the conclusion that, as Mailer’s biographer J. Michael Lennon put it,  Mailer chose “no conspiracy, and a complex Oswald; a man dealt a bad hand, in no way heroic, but bold, idealistic in a twisted way, and sympathetic.”

Getting Real with Norman Mailer

Norman Mailer is like America. Loud and colorful, sometimes brilliant, at times mediocre or worse, often the victim of his own self-regard, and willing to die trying for the right cause.

Stormin’ Norman and Battlin’ Baldwin

James Wolcott mentions Mike’s interview with Donald K. Fried in The Daily Beast.

Murder, Sex, and the Writing Life: Norman Mailer’s Biography

How do you tell the story of one of the 20th century’s larger-than-life literary figures? Norman Mailer’s latest biographer J. Michael Lennon talks literary reputation, omens, women, and the never written.

Was Norman Mailer the last tough guy?

Mailer married six times and had nine children; there were innumerable affairs, parties and arguments. He published 44 books. He never stopped. After one of his children is born, he leaves the hospital and that night begins an affair with his sister-in-law.

Norman Mailer, the Last of the Literary Wild Men

Lee Siegel writes: “A new Norman Mailer biography shows that his life may have been his greatest work of art.”

Six marriages and one assault with a deadly weapon…

The biographies of most writers go roughly like this: born, type, type, type, acclaim, type, type, type, marry, type, type, type, die.

Mailer is the exception. He never stinted on the typing, being a stranger to brevity – ‘I can’t get someone through a door,’ he once said, ‘without blowing a thousand words.’

But he also found plenty of time for activities that other authors can only imagine, such as sex and violence.

A Review from The Telegraph

“Be regular and orderly in your life like a bourgeois,” Flaubert wrote, “so that you may be violent and original in your work.” Try telling that to Norman Mailer. He fought in the war and he fought in bars. He had six wives and stabbed one of them. He drank heavily, took drugs, slept with anyone he could and stood for New York mayor. He fell out with everyone who picked up a pen. Amid the mayhem he wrote great journalism, wildly uneven novels, bad poetry and made truly abysmal films. At his best he lived originally, challenging every constricting convention; at his worst he was simply violent.

Getting Real: The Life and Times of Norman Mailer

Mailer is like America. Loud and colorful, diverse, sometimes brilliant, often the victim of his own self regard, believer in an exceptionalism mostly glimpsed in the mirror, and willing to die trying or for the right cause. As he said about his own country: “The thing that distresses me about America is that for all the country’s done, I don’t think it’s done one quarter of what it should. I believe it was destined, by history, if you will, to be the greatest country that ever existed. I don’t think it’s come near it.”

Providence Journal Interviews Mike

When J. Michael Lennon was a graduate student at the University of Rhode Island in the early 1970s, he did something unusual for someone writing a dissertation about a famous writer.

Instead of researching someone who’d been rotting underground for scores of years, he wrote about a live author — Norman Mailer.

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