How To Use Norman Mailer In A Sentence
- Consider the author-identification on the bookjacket of Peter Manso's 1985 Norman Mailer biography. It Can't Be Great If Nobody Notices
- Norman Mailer described life at the mansion as "outward-bound and timeless", and indeed Hefner seems to float in an airbrushed dream space, an unfading caricature of his former self. Hugh Hefner in six volumes
- He published his own poetry as well as international lit-wigs Allen Ginsberg, Norman Mailer, Gregory Corso and East Village luminaries like Ted Berrigan in a zine called Fuck You/A Magazine of the Arts. In late 1964, he and brother poet Tuli Kupferberg co-founded the Fugs, the name borrowed from Mailer's fornicatory euphemism. Michael Simmons: Ed Sanders: The American Bard Takes On Katrina
- In 2008 Bjorkman was seen backstage of the Charlie Rose show, playing patty-cake with a pink tu-tu clad Norman Mailer, one year after Mailer's death, thereby dispelling the icon's macho image forever. Poetipedia
- Or is the hipster a kind of permanent cultural middleman in hypermediated late capitalism, selling out alternative sources of social power developed by outsider groups, just as the original "white negros" evinced by Norman Mailer did to the original, pre-pejorative "hipsters" - blacks looking for modes of social expression that could serve as a source of pride, power, unification, and emblems of resistance. PopMatters
- We all can't be pin-ups like Tom Cruise or Nicole Kidman, or rock stars like Bono or Sinead O'Connor, or gifted writers like Edna O'Brien or Norman Mailer.
- Norman Mailer toyed with a respelling in his 1967 novel, "Why Are We in Vietnam? Archive 2010-02-01
- Norman Mailer was not a "yippie" but he was going to march. "It's a negative intensity" between John McCain and Sarah Palin.
- While there have been many distinguished American winners, including Tom Wolfe and John Updike, bad sex veterans reserve a special place in their hearts for Norman Mailer, who won posthumously in 2007 for a passage in which the word "excrement" is used so alarmingly that it threatens to put a reader off sex for good. NYT > Home Page
- Here he deploys dialogue — which makes up perhaps 80 percent of the novel — brilliantly, to convey action and narrative, mores and social background, and above all, character (Norman Mailer appositely wrote that Higgins may be “the American writer who is closest to Henry Green”). New Fiction