From Publishers Weekly
The lives of Mailer, like the facets of his character, are many, because he keeps inventing himself. That is the underlying premise of Rollyson's attempt to grapple with this large literary talent cum bully-boy cum Jewish leprechaun, a rebel with many causes, who from his stunningly successful early novel The Naked and the Dead to his current Harlot's Ghost has bobbed and jabbed in combat with his critics and his times. Mailer's an aggressor with charm, a star performer with a penchant for shooting himself in the foot. Novelist, essayist, journalist, movie director (of his film Tough Guys Don't Dance a critic said, "Tough guys shouldn't direct"), amateur pugilist, reputed misogynist six times married, Pulitizer Prize winner--Mailer has been all these; and in this amply researched and sharp-eyed study there's nourishing fare for both his admirers and his detractors. Rollyson, biographer of Marilyn Monroe, Lillian Hellman and Martha Gellhorn, aptly does a good deal of jabbing and weaving himself in trying to catch a man who seems to have made flight from the gentility of his background an obsession, who has kept inventing himself perhaps because he has never quite found himself. But Rollyson may go too far in calling his subject a genius. Photos. 25,000 first printing; $35,000 ad/promo.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Rollyson is in fine fettle in this first literary biography of Norman Mailer. Doted on as a child by his mother, Mailer has constantly had to "reinvent" himself to prevent a crippling sense of failure after the heady success of his first novel, The Naked and the Dead (1948). Since then, Mailer's fiction, reportage, and essays (notably "The White Negro" of the "hip" Fifties) has extolled the individual's struggle against postwar conformity--while at the same time snubbing women. Unfortunately (aside from such things as stabbing his second wife), his excessive need to live what he writes has resulted in an uneven portrayal of the American Dream. The author suggests Mailer may have had his last success, but his story is definitely "To Be Continued." Copious notes, photographs, and a bibliography are included. Index not seen. Recommended for both lay readers and scholars.
- Kenneth Mintz, Hoboken P.L., Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.