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A Ticket to the Circus: A Memoir [Hardcover]

Norris Church Mailer (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 6, 2010
A great American love story, this warm, funny, revealing memoir introduces the world to Norman Mailer’s greatest inspiration, his wife of more than thirty years. Like Zelda Fitzgerald before her, Norris Church Mailer has led a life as large and as colorful as her husband’s—and every bit as engaging.

Growing up a strict Free Will Baptist in the South of the 1950s, Norris Church, christened Barbara Jean Davis, was crowned “Little Miss Little Rock” at the age of three and always knew that life had more to offer her than the comforts of small-town Arkansas. But she could never have guessed that in her early twenties she would date future president Bill Clinton (and predict his national victory even after he lost his first run for Congress), or that the following year she would meet Norman Mailer, who was passing through town giving a lecture at the local college. They fell in love in one night—and their marriage lasted thirty-three years.

Despite her enduring love for the man, Norris found life with the writer full of challenges—from carving out her own niche in the wake of five ex-wives and numerous former girlfriends, to easing her way into the hearts of her seven stepchildren, to negotiating the ferocious world of Mailer’s fame, friends, and literary life. The couple’s New York parties were legendary, and their social circle included such luminaries as Muhammad Ali, Jacqueline Kennedy, Truman Capote, Gore Vidal, and Imelda Marcos.

Their decades-long obsession with each other, as seen in the intimate letters that Norris reveals here for the first time, was not without tests and infidelities; theirs was a marriage full of friendship, betrayal, doubts, understanding, and deep, complicated, lifelong passion.

With southern charm and wit, Norris Church Mailer depicts the full evolution of her life, from her childhood all the way through her intense marriage with Norman and his heartbreaking death. This unforgettable memoir will enchant readers with its honesty and insight into how we grow up and how we love.

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Editorial Reviews

From Bookmarks Magazine

This candid, entertaining memoir proves that Norman Mailer wasn't the only talented writer in the family. Norris unveils her life story with warmth, wit, and grit, despite some occasionally precious prose. While a few critics were disturbed by Norris's stated willingness to stifle her individuality and ambitions to please her temperamental husband, her frankness in sharing many of the grim and often humiliating particulars won them over, and she provides plenty of juicy details about Norman and his contemporaries. Skimming over his body of work, Norris paints an affectionate, if unappealing, portrait of Mailer as husband and father, and A Ticket to the Circus is a love story, as well as "both guilty pleasure and good read" (Cleveland Plain Dealer).

From Booklist

The sixth (and last) wife of Norman Mailer, Norris Church Mailer, met the late writer in 1975, when she was 26 and he twice her age; they were married for 27 years. Her memoir is, among other things, the story of a series of emancipations: from the constraints of her loving but limiting parents and the claustrophobic moralism of her Arkansas hometown; from her first marriage to a man she quickly outgrew; and from her inhibitions about writing and creating art. And even though this book is very much a love story, chronicling the ups and downs of the author’s stormy relationship with one of the twentieth-century’s gale-force literary personalities, another theme is the author’s complicated emotional emancipation from Norman, precipitated by discovery of his many extramarital dalliances but also perhaps by the simple passage of time. All of this happens amid circumstances that are consistently larger than life: parties with the New York literati, summers in Provincetown, and socializing with Imelda Marcos after a Mohammad Ali fight. There’s even a cameo by a young William Jefferson Clinton. Captivating and often tender, this tale of personal growth also functions as something of a counterpoint to The Last Party (2003), a memoir by Norman’s second wife, Adele Mailer. --Brendan Driscoll

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1 Reprint edition (April 6, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400067944
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400067947
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.2 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #448,435 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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39 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars As Long As There Are Mailers, There Will Be Stories, April 7, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Ticket to the Circus: A Memoir (Hardcover)
Norris Church Mailer has written a love story of her life with Norman Mailer. He of the many wild affairs with women he couldn't resist, the six wives, and the eight children. Theirs was a wild, exciting time, filled with one adventure after another and the crises that ensued. Norris has had a wonderful life but not without trials and tribulations.

Norris was born in Arkansas with the name Barbara Jean. She had the southern upbringing that gave her the southern drawl and style that permeates much of her book. Her mother and father were from poor, hard working families, and Barbara Jean knew what it was like to use an outhouse. Her grandfather was a 'mule skinner' or mule trainer, and Norman used to tease her about her heritage. Her mother had periods of depression most of Barbara's life, but all in all, she had a happy life. She went to college, married her high school sweetheart and had a son, Matt. They married too young and divorce followed. Barbara Jean became a high school art teacher, and she was an excellent teacher- her students became her friends. This was just before the hippie revolution with free love and sex, and Barbara Jean loved the free and easy style. Barbara Jean met Norman Mailer at a book signing and that was that. A few meetings later, Barbara Jean moved to be with him in New York City. She had to leave her son with her parents, but she vowed to bring him to NYC as soon as she could.

Barbara Jean said the minute she stepped off the plane in NYC, she found her home. Norman met her at the airport and he gave her a kiss that lasted until they got to Brooklyn where he lived. Barbara Jean met his family, and in particular, his mother, who was the light of Norman's life. They hit it off and that was the beginning of Barbara Jeans acceptance into the family. Barbara Jean became a model and changed her name to Norris Church. Norris was her married name, and she loved church, so it fit together. Norman had told her about his many wives and children and one by one she came to meet them. He was still married to wife #4, but involved with another woman. It was all very complicated and a little intimidating. Norris found her place in the family and organized the group, took care of all of the events and important times in the lives of this large family. She was able to bring her son Matt to her new life and he fit in perfectly. After a few years she became pregnant and Norman decided it was time to divorce wife #4 and marry Norris. After a long and winding road, Norman divorced #4, married the woman who was to become wife #5, to make the child from that union legitimate and finally married Norris. The heart and hearth of the family was finally the wife of the man she loved. Their life was full of politics and parties and traveling and fun. Meeting and greeting the famous and infamous. Trips to Cuba and Russia and all over the world. Their favorite place was their home in Provincetown. Their life was hectic, full of children and also full of love.

Norris was an artist and writer in her own right. Norman, however, never gave her that due. Maybe he wanted only one famous person in the family. Norris sold many paintings and later on went on to write her own books and was successful. Life was good. It was not until many years into their marriage that Norris discovered that Norman was unfaithful, and as she was to find, many many women were part of Norman's life. Some of the women were older with some girth and as Norman told her, sometimes he wanted to be the 'pretty one'. Somehow Norris was able to get past these many infidelities, and they made a happy life. She says that sex bound them together, and the love they had for each other. At one point, Norris discovered she had cancer, and she went through many surgeries, chemotherapies and treatments for a virulent bowel cancer and somehow survived. Norman had cardiac surgery and from that time on his health failed. The most important man in the lives of the Mailer family died in 2007. Norris has gone on to make her own life. Her children and grandchildren are a big part of that life. She is still fighting the cancer that has followed her, but she remains upbeat. After all, she has lived the life she wanted and in the manner that suited her.

An entertaining and uplifting story in some aspects. Norris Mailer gave up some of her life for the man she loved, but she did it willingly. Some women would not have followed the life she chose. But in my mind, she is a strong and independent woman and one to admire.

Addendum: Norris Church Mailer died on Sunday, 11-21-10. May she rest in peace.

Highly Recommended. prisrob 04-07-10

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Life with Mailer, April 16, 2010
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This review is from: A Ticket to the Circus: A Memoir (Hardcover)
This remarkable and wonderful book by a remarkably courageous and wonderfully warm woman is a must-read for anyone interested in great loves, bravery in the face of cancer, or Norman Mailer. Norris Church Mailer was Norman's sixth wife and (as she always stated) "the last one." During their "warm and wonderful" (Norman Mailer) and sometimes turbulent thirty-three years together, Norris showed herself to be a loyal and loving wife, a fine mother to two and stepmother to seven, an accomplished teacher, artist, model and occasional actress. She is also an excellent writer, as readers of her two novels, WINDCHILL SUMMER and CHEAP DIAMONDS can attest. This is her best book by far: funny, witty, candid and self-effacing. Now I finally know what "a courageous battle against cancer" means. Above all, this volume is magnetic, engrossing, infused with the fire of a unique personality. I couldn't put it down.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Okay Memoir, July 6, 2010
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This review is from: A Ticket to the Circus: A Memoir (Hardcover)
Usually, I enjoy learning about people I know nothing about (I guess that's why memoirs are my favorite type of literature), but this memoir should have been an autobiography, given the fact that it went on and on and on about every small detail of her life. I can read a good memoir in 2-3 days, but this one dragged on to 7 days of boring, dull reading, to the point that I was skimming from the middle to the end of the book, something I never do.

She had a few interesting tales from her life, but I found that I was often annoyed by her. She seemed constantly obsessed with herself and went on in grand detail about her sex life with her husband, to the point where she put in the letters from Norman Mailer about his desires (she was 26 and he was older than her father by a year... not really Harlequin romance material in my eyes) once he'd leave his wife and be with her.

This could have been more interesting if she'd left out the massive amount of unnecessary detail.
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