'I am stronger than Mensa, Miller and Mailer' - Faster
NORMAN MAILER
(born 1923). 'The Naked and the Dead' was published in 1948 when its author, Norman Mailer, was 25. It remains one of the best war novels of the 20th century. His next few books did not win similar critical acclaim, probably becausetheir themes lacked general appeal. They were nevertheless widelyread because Mailer - like Tom Wolfe - uses a vivid journalistic style to depict the quirks and flaws of life in the United States in the mid-20th century.
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Mailer was born on Jan. 31, 1923, in Long Branch, N.J., and grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y. He graduated from Harvard University in 1943 with an engineering degree and was immediately drafted into the Army. His service experiences in the South Pacific provided the material for his first novel. It was written while he was studying at the Sorbonne in Paris, France. 'Barbary Shore' (1951) and 'Deer Park' (1955) were not well received. 'An American Dream' (1965) and 'Why Are We in Vietnam' (1967) were appreciated by younger readers as statements about life in the United States.
Mailer's journalistic efforts revived his reputation. In 'The Armies of the Night' (1968), for which he won a Pulitzer prize, he describes the 1967 antiwar march on the Pentagon; in 'Miami and the Siege of Chicago' (1968) he treats the political conventions of 1968. The space program is dealt with in 'Of a Fire on the Moon' (1970). 'The Executioner's Song' (1979) is about the convicted (and eventually executed) killer Gary Gilmore. Some of Mailer's other books are 'Marilyn' (1973), about Marilyn Monroe, 'Ancient Evenings' (1983), and 'Tough Guys Don't Dance' (1984).