Archivist, Biographer, Educator

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DID YOU KNOW? Asked to name his favorite word by the New York Times, Mailer said: “Improvisational.”

The Fiction of Nonfiction

Mike Introduces the Biography

Slideshow of Mailer’s Provincetown Home

Mike and Barbara Wasserman

Photos in the Brooklyn neighborhood where Norman Mailer lived for 45 years, by Marleen Wynants.

Hastings Interviews JML

Years ago, in my very early twenties, I set out to write a book. I started a routine. I no longer drank, so I substituted a glass bottle of sparkling water for beer (similar heft), thrived on a diet of Parliament Lights and iced coffee, and always took a nap in the afternoon. For inspiration in the early mornings, though, I turned to Norman Mailer’s book on writing, “The Spooky Art.” I would read passages for motivation; it was as if Mailer, like the boxing coach in Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out, was a few steps behind me, over my shoulder in a hooded sweatshirt, imparting brutal words of encouragement: never skip out on the muse, write every day, and, please, for the sake of your readers, don’t be such a chicken shit.

Dr. J. Michael Lennon is the man who helped Mailer put “The Spooky Art” together. Lennon, an author and professor at Wilkes University, also collaborated on Mailer’s last book, “On God: An Uncommon Conversation.” Since Mailer’s death in Nov. 2007, Lennon has been at work on the only authorized biography of Mailer’s life, a 300,000 word volume that will be published by Simon&Schuster. At the same time, he’s played a major role in establishing The Norman Mailer Writers Colony in Provincetown, MA.

Read the entire interview @ True/Slant.

Kirkus Names Bio Hot

Kirkus Reviews names Norman Mailer: A Double Life one of this fall’s hottest biographies.

Bio Named Essential Fall Book

Norman Mailer: A Double Life named in The Atlantic Wire as an essential fall book.

Bio: British Cover

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DID YOU KNOW? In 1983, Mailer’s screenplay for The Executioner’s Song (directed by his long-time collaborator, Lawrence Schiller) was nominated for an Emmy. Tommy Lee Jones, in a break-through role, won one for playing Gary Gilmore, who was executed by a firing squad in January 1977. He was the first person executed in the U.S. in the ten years.

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