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         Mailer Norman:     more books (99)
  1. Norman Mailer: A Collection of Critical Essays(20th Century Views)
  2. Of a Fire on the Moon by Norman Mailer, 1985-12
  3. Mailer: His Life and Times by Peter Manso, 2008-11-18
  4. The Gospel According to the Son by Norman Mailer, 1997
  5. Barbary Shore by Norman Mailer, 1997-09-30
  6. Prisoner of Sex by Norman Mailer, 1985-11-13
  7. Mornings with Mailer: A Recollection of Friendship by Dwayne Raymond, 2010-02-01
  8. Short Fiction of Norman Mailer by Norman Mailer, 1981-08
  9. The Big Empty: Dialogues on Politics, Sex, God, Boxing, Morality, Myth, Poker and Bad Conscience in America by Norman Mailer, John Buffalo Mailer, 2006-01-24
  10. by Norman Mailer (Author) The Executioner's Song (Mass Market Paperback) by Norman Mailer (Author), 1980
  11. White Negro by Norman Mailer, 1967-11
  12. Sleeping With Bad Boys: A 1956 Playboy Model's Escapades with James Dean,Hugh Hefner, Norman Mailer and the famous writers of the 1950's beat generation by Alice Denham, 2006-11-07
  13. Norman Mailer by Jean Radford, 1975-04
  14. Norman Mailer: The Last Romantic by Carl Rollyson, 2008-11-24

41. Open Source » Blog Archive » Thank You, Norman Mailer
It’s been a pleasure all weekend to picture norman mailer finally meeting the Maker he’s been courting so originally, so well, these many years.
http://www.radioopensource.org/thank-you-norman-mailer/
with Christopher Lydon
Warming Up Recent
MLK Jr. after 40 years: a Fraternal Memoir
Friday, January 25 Backstage with Henry V:
Tuesday, January 22 The post-imperial maestro: Sir Colin Davis
Monday, January 21 George Bush in Jerusalem: Not Too Late for a Legacy
Thursday, January 10
Wednesday, January 09 At Home with Harold Bloom: (2) on the Humanities
Friday, December 28 At Home with Harold Bloom: (1) on Walt Whitman
Tuesday, December 25 At Home with Harold Bloom: (3) The Jazz Bridge
Friday, December 21 Helen Vendler: Reading and Riffing on W. B. Yeats
Thursday, December 20 American Transcendentalism
Tuesday, December 18 Saturday, December 15 Juan Cole: from Bonaparte to Bush Friday, December 14 A Free Life Friday, December 07 Chavismo with some new brakes on it Tuesday, December 04 Pakistan for Beginners: 3, with Omer Alvie Thursday, November 29 Pakistan for Beginners: 2 Tuesday, November 27 Pakistan 2.0 Monday, November 26 "This was the worst war ever" : Ken Burns Tuesday, November 20 Tuesday, November 20

42. Proust Questionnaire: Norman Mailer: Entertainment & Culture: Vanityfair.com
Over a career that has spanned six decades, norman mailer has been a literary force to be reckoned with–from The Naked and the Dead, in 1948, to his notable
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2007/01/proust_mailer200701
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    Proust Questionnaire
    Norman Mailer
    The Naked and the Dead, in 1948, to his notable presence in New Journalism, to his current and most controversial feat, The Castle in the Forest.
    photograph by Gasper Tringale January 2007
    What is your idea of perfect happiness?
    Let the next 35 responses offer their clues. A fool draws a road map to his magic city. What is your greatest fear?
    That I will never meet Michiko Kakutani and so not be able to tell her what I think of her. She has an unseemly haste to rush into print with the first very bad review of any book I write. She does this ahead of publication. That is a strategy. If the first review of a book is dreadful, an author needs at least three good ones to change that first impression. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

43. Norman Mailer: The Most Overrated Writer Of The 20th Century : Edward Champion&#
We all knew this was coming the approbations, the lionizations, the veritable bullshit that norman mailer was a gift to the world.
http://www.edrants.com/norman-mailer-the-most-overrated-writer-of-the-20th-centu
Norman Mailer: The Most Overrated Writer of the 20th Century
Written by Posted on November 10, 2007
Filed Under Uncategorized We all knew this was coming: the approbations, the lionizations, the veritable bullshit that Norman Mailer was a gift to the world. All this largely perpetuated by a man advertising for himself. Literally. Not just the book. Mailer was so insecure, so arrogant, so unwilling to listen, that he took out advertisements in newspapers that panned his work. The Castle in the Forest What did Mailer give us? What was his chief contribution to letters? Mailer as King of the Universe. Mailer as knowing egomaniac. Mailer as hyper-masculine creature of the day and night. Mailer who never listened to anybody but himself. Mailer who, if he considered your work, did it because he wanted you to know he was Mailer and that you were not Mailer. Mailer the sexist pig who got his ass whooped by Germaine Greer. This writeup , however, is a good start.) UPDATE:
Comments
  • fausto on November 10th, 2007 5:33 pm
  • 44. Norman Mailer: His Last Rolling Stone Interview : Rolling Stone
    What was your relationship with the counterculture by 1967? Coming out of the WorldWar II generatio
    http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/17301638/norman_mailer_his_last_rolling_s
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    Norman Mailer: His Last Rolling Stone Interview
    The literary giant sat down with writer Mark Binelli earlier this year; here's the complete text as it ran in Rolling Stone's first 40th Anniversary issue
    Mark Binelli Posted Nov 12, 2007 2:31 PM Page 1 What was your relationship with the counterculture by 1967? Coming out of the WorldWar II generation, you were a bit older than the people driving the movement. Did you feel much of a generation gap? I thought they weren't responsible. You'd hear kids saying, "Let's burn an American flag." Even worse, a rather scurrilous type I knew said, "Let's burn a dog, to show them what it is like burning people in Vietnam." I remember saying to him, "Are you out of your fucking mind? Burn a dog?" But it was typical of the extremity. My generation had come out of the war, feeling on one hand that we had really been involved in a watershed. And on the other hand, as you almost always feel after war, we felt we had been betrayed. We hadn't been in that war to have a cold war following it. So we had roots. We had a historical sense of things. I had the feeling that this new generation was just born out of nowhere. And I also felt that they didn't know what they were doing. On the other hand, it was exciting as hell, because at least finally we were breaking out. But the "we," as I say,was slightly smudged. What else divided your generations? How about the drug culture?

    45. The Paris Review - The Art Of Fiction No. 32
    norman mailer. © Nancy Crampton. norman mailer mailer God can write in the third person only so long as He understands His world.
    http://www.theparisreview.org/viewinterview.php/prmMID/4503

    Return to Interview Archive Index

    NORMAN MAILER
    The Art of Fiction No. 32 Interviewed by Steven Marcus Issue 31, Winter-Spring 1964 Purchase this issue View a manuscript page Download a PDF of the full interview
    INTERVIEWER
    You know, Thackeray says at one point that the novelist knows everything. He is like God, and this may be why he could write in the third person.
    MAILER
    God can write in the third person only so long as He understands His world. But if the world becomes contradictory or incomprehensible to Him, then God begins to grow concerned with His
    Download a PDF of the full interview

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    46. Unleashed: Norman Mailer
    mailer was born to a Jewish family in Long Branch New Jersey He was brought up in Brooklyn New York and attended Harvard University in 1939 where he studied
    http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2093071.htm
    Search the ABC ABC Home Radio Television ... Shop
    Unleashed presents diverse and robust opinion about politics, society, belief and behaviour. 16 November 2007, 14:00
    Norman Mailer
    Norman Mailer Mailer was born to a Jewish family in Long Branch, New Jersey. He was brought up in Brooklyn, New York and attended Harvard University in 1939 where he studied aeronautical engineering.
    At the university, he became interested in writing and published his first story when he was 18. Mailer was drafted into the Army in World War II and served in the South Pacific. In 1948, just before enrolling in the Sorbonne in Paris, he wrote a book that made him world-famous: The Naked and the Dead , based on his personal experiences during World War II.
    In the following years, Mailer continued to work in the field of the novel. Barbary Shore (1951) was a surreal parable of Cold War left politics, set in a Brooklyn rooming-house. His 1955 novel The Deer Park drew on his experiences working as a screenwriter in Hollywood in the early 1950s. It was initially rejected by numerous publishers owing to its sexual content. But in the mid-1950s, he became increasingly known for his counter-cultural essays. He was one of the founders of The Village Voice in 1955. In the book Advertisements for Myself (1959), including the essay

    47. Author Norman Mailer Dead At 84 - Arts, Books, More - MSNBC.com
    norman mailer, the macho prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country s literary conscience and provocateur, died Saturday. He was 84.
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21721695/
    Skip navigation Web MSNBC Entertainment Gossip Celebrities Television ... Comics, Sudoku Categories U.S. news World news Politics Business ... Local news Browse Video Photos Community Today Show ... MSNBC TV
    Writer Norman Mailer dead at 84
    Author of ‘The Naked and the Dead’ was known for countercultural views
    Slide show
    Norman Mailer, 1923-2007
    Remembering the macho prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country's literary conscience. more photos AFP - Getty Images
    (FILES) Undated file picture of late provocative US writer Norman Mailer, famed for his first novel "The Naked and the Dead," who died overnight at the age of 84, US media reported , 10 November 2007. Mailer's first novel shot him to literary fame at the tender age of 25 when it hit the top of the New York Time's best-seller list. He remained a top literary figure for nearly 60 years, publishing his last book, "The Castle in the Forest," just a few months ago. AFP PHOTO STR/FILES (B/W ONLY) (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)
    NEW YORK - Norman Mailer, the macho prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country's literary conscience and provocateur with such books as "The Naked and the Dead," died Saturday, his literary executor said. He was 84. Mailer died of acute renal failure at Mount Sinai Hospital, said J. Michael Lennon, who is also the author's biographer.

    48. Norman Mailer, 84; Provocative, Prolific Novelist And Essayist - Los Angeles Tim
    norman mailer, the literary lion and author of nearly 50 books, died Saturday at age 84 of acute renal failure. Above, he reflected on turning 80 in an
    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-mailer11nov11,0,6488020.story
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    Huntington Beach ... E-Mail Newsletters RSS Feeds Help Contact Us L.A. Times Archives Reprint Requests ... Subscribe Kathy Willens / Associated Press Norman Mailer, the literary lion and author of nearly 50 books, died Saturday at age 84 of acute renal failure. Above, he reflected on turning 80 in an interview at his Brooklyn Heights, N.Y., apartment.
    Norman Mailer, 84; provocative, prolific novelist and essayist
    Email Picture Kathy Willens / Associated Press Norman Mailer, the literary lion and author of nearly 50 books, died Saturday at age 84 of acute renal failure. Above, he reflected on turning 80 in an interview at his Brooklyn Heights, N.Y., apartment. The author of 'The Naked and the Dead' won glory and scorn, on and off the page, as one of the major literary figures of his generation. By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    49. Boston Daily Blog - Boston Magazine
    The passing of norman mailer has elicited tributes, memories, and even a video of Rip Torn trying to hit mailer in the head with a hammer (in Spanish!
    http://www.bostonmagazine.com/blogs/boston/2007/11/14/mailers-death-we-called-it
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      Every Thursday you'll receive Boston Magazine's dining e-newsletter, serving up the latest restaurant news and reviews.

    50. Norman Mailer On Google [SearchEngineWatch]
    norman mailer died at 84 this year, only months after the publication of his latest book, On God, a brilliant dialogue about God and Good and Evil.
    http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/071231-142406
    Search ClickZ Network Or use Advanced Search You are here: SEW Home SEW Blog Google: Scholar Main
    December 31, 2007
    Norman Mailer On Google
    Norman Mailer died at 84 this year, only months after the publication of his latest book, On God , a brilliant dialogue about God and Good and Evil. Before Mailer passed away, I planned to interview him about Google and God and whether corporate technology in any human hands can Do No Evil. Mailer was not a search engine expert. Nor was he a technologist. He was fearless, though. As a towering literary figure, he took center stage in some of the great debates of the 20th Century. He refused to go quietly when the novel and the printed word lost prominence with the advent of film, television and the Internet. His personal theology as outlined in On God provides a foundation for understanding technology and its influence on society. If there's sufficient interest among Search Engine Watch readers, we'll revisit the controversial New York Times column by Thomas Friedman, entitled "Is Google God?"

    51. Norman Mailer Biography And List Of Works - Norman Mailer Books
    norman mailer Biography norman Kingsley mailer (born January 31, 1923) is an American writer and innovator of the nonfictional novel. norman mailer was
    http://www.biblio.com/authors/104/Norman_Mailer_Biography.html
    View cart Help Rare Books Textbooks ... Search Search for books By author: By title: By keyword or ISBN: By binding: Any Hardcover Paperback Advanced booksearch @Biblio Search for books Browse books Bookstores Community BiblioUnbound The monthly newsletter for booklovers E-mail address: Author Biographies
    Norman Mailer
    Norman Kingsley Mailer (born January 31, 1923) is an American writer and innovator of the nonfictional novel. Norman Mailer was born in Long Branch, New Jersey. He was brought up in Brooklyn and began attending Harvard University in 1939. At the university he became interested in writing and published his first story when he was 18. Mailer enlisted in the army in World War II and served in the South Pacific. In 1948, just before enrolling in the Sorbonne in Paris, he wrote a book that made him world-famous: The Naked and the Dead , based on his personal experiences during World War II. It was hailed by many as one of the best American novels to come out of the war years.

    52. The Furious Passions Of Norman Mailer - 10 Zen Monkeys
    But while sex remained a fascination for norman mailer (along with power and celebrity), he lived his ideas — the good ones and the bad.
    http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/2007/11/12/the-passions-of-norman-mailer/

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    The Furious Passions of Norman Mailer
    By Destiny
    November 12th, 2007
    reddit_url='http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/2007/11/12/the-passions-of-norman-mailer/' reddit_title='[TITLE]' He had two Pulitzer Prizes, and six wives.
    But while sex remained a fascination for Norman Mailer (along with power and celebrity), he lived
    Here's some of the highlights.
    Movies Gone Bad
    Attracted by Hollywood intrigue, Mailer devoted his third novel The Deer Park to the depravation of the entertainment industry, naming it after the notorious 18th-century pleasure groves of King Louis XV. ("...that gorge of innocence and virtue in which were engulfed so many victims.")
    Publisher Barney Rosset lent his house for part of the filming, and remembered that things quickly descended into chaos. My mother in law went outside, then came back into the house screaming, "There's a midget in the swimming pool...!"
    Someone had thrown Herve Villechaize into the pool, and he was drowning.

    Rosset drove to Mailer's hotel room, banged on the door, and shouted "Norman, you've gotta come back and get your midget!" Villechaize was taken to a hospital where his stomach was pumped (possibly for alcohol), but the next day, the future

    53. In This Corner, Norman Mailer - Dick Cavett - Opinion - New York Times Blog
    It was at a vividly bad time in norman mailer’s life that I met him, and a sort of watertreading time in mine. He had stabbed his wife, and I was a copy
    http://cavett.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/11/14/in-this-corner-norman-mailer/
    document.write(day + " " + month + " " + myweekday + ", " + year);
    Opinion
    November 14, 2007, 9:49 pm
    In This Corner, Norman Mailer
    It was at a vividly bad time in Norman Mailer’s life that I met him, and a sort of water-treading time in mine. He had stabbed his wife, and I was a copy boy at Time magazine. Norman Mailer (Illustration: Thomas Libetti) Time had just done a rough piece on Mailer, even publishing a ghastly, wild-eyed picture of him being arraigned at the station house. The magazine’s treatment of Mailer had been been much protested, as I knew from working at the copy desk and seeing the mail. One night after work, I emerged wearily from the subway on Central Park West. There was Mailer. My pulse accelerated. He was with three tough-looking guys and he, too, was tough-looking. But I was a big fan and I just had to be able to say to the guys back at the copy desk, “Guess who I met last night.” “Hi, Mr. Mailer. I’d just like to say hello. I can’t very well apologize for Time magazine, where I work, but…”

    54. NORMAN MAILER
    Perusing norman mailer s literary works is frustrating to a critic trained in the twentiethcentury Western traditions of a rational empiricism whose goal
    http://www.english.upenn.edu/~despey/mailer.htm
    NORMAN MAILER
    Anna Banks
    "I keep thinking that if I study the contents of the kitchen long and hard enough, I will figure out some incongruous truth lurking beneath the chaotic surface of Mailer's venture." This is the reaction of Daphne Merkin who, seeking an interview with Mailer, walks into the set of the movie version of Tough Guys Don't Dance , which the author is directing (Merkin 1987, 44). Her reaction could just as well express the feelings experienced by a reader and critic of Mailer's vast body of literature. Seeking to understand Mailer's venture involves the careful scrutiny of his novels, nonfiction essays, poems, plays, social commentaries, andnow we must addscreenplays. Mailer's latest creative venture, apparently, is in the realm of feature films, and the author's new role is as a director of films. Mailer likens being a director to being an "impresario" and states that while novel writing "is like having a difficult second wife," making a movie is "elegant work" (Merkin 1987, 47). Perhaps more accurately, Mailer's move into the visual realm of films is just a natural extension of his career-long search for central themes through which his experiences can best be conveyed. All his novels and nonfiction writing are evocative and visual in nature, a style that translates easily into the world of film. Perusing Norman Mailer's literary works is frustrating to a critic trained in the twentieth-century Western traditions of a rational empiricism whose goal is usually to categorize and quantify. Mailer, perhaps intentionally, defies categorization. Each piece of work that Mailer produces represents a clear example of what the anthropologist Clifford Geertz calls "genre blurring," In his latest book

    55. The Etch-A-Sketchist: Norman Mailer
    Evel Kneivel Saigon, 68 Etcha-Sketch Films Alex Meh Brian Hall and Oates Mario Pervez Musharraf norman mailer Nathan and Lauren
    http://etchasketchist.blogspot.com/2007/11/norman-mailer.html
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    56. Norman Mailer: Hitler And The Human Ego - International Herald Tribune
    There is a semiharrowing, careening, self-burlesquing moment that occurs deep in norman mailer s Armies of the Night, his third-person account of taking
    http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/01/19/features/IDLEDE20.php
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      Norman Mailer in 1969. ( Michael Evans/The New York Times (1969) )
      Norman Mailer: Hitler and the human ego
      By Lee Siegel Published: January 19, 2007 document.writeln(''); E-Mail Article Listen to Article Printer-Friendly 3-Column Format Translate Share Article Text Size There is a semi-harrowing, careening, self-burlesquing moment that occurs deep in Norman Mailer's "Armies of the Night," his third-person account of taking part in the massive protest against the Vietnam War in Washington in October 1967 — not only an American masterpiece, but one of the most liberating books ever swirled into being by a human mind. Mailer has succeeded in getting himself arrested, and he's thrown into a police wagon with a young American Nazi. They stare each other down, exchange threats, stand steaming and streaming together in that quickest form of intimacy known as hatred. The Nazi begins the taunting: "'You Jew bastard,' he shouted. 'Dirty Jew with kinky hair.'" "They didn't speak that way. It was too corny. Yet he could only answer, 'You filthy Kraut.'"

    57. MAILER BACK IN HOSPITAL AS KIDS KEEP VIGIL
    Legendary writer norman mailer has been hospitalized for the second time in as many months for severe respiratory problems, and his children are now holding
    http://www.nypost.com/seven/10172007/news/regionalnews/mailer_back_in_hospital_a
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    MAILER BACK IN HOSPITAL AS KIDS KEEP VIGIL
    By KATE SHEEHY Loading new images... October 17, 2007 Legendary writer Norman Mailer has been hospitalized for the second time in as many months for severe respiratory problems, and his children are now holding daily vigils at his bedside in the critical-care unit at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. "He's not in very good shape. It's breaking my heart," ex-wife Carol Mailer said yesterday. "He went in this time because his lung collapsed. . . . They got the scar tissue out, and the surgery was successful. "But I just don't think he's doing well. My heart is heavy," she said. Mailer, who was raised in Brooklyn and grew up to win two Pulitzer Prizes, was hospitalized over Labor Day in Boston for asthma. But the 84-year-old dad "insisted on leaving the hospital to be at [daughter Maggie's] wedding" Sept. 8, even if he was too weak to walk her down the aisle, said Carol Mailer.

    58. Film Society Of Lincoln Center
    Riding the Whirlwind norman mailer talks with Michael Chaiken about his norman mailer Movies were dessert. I used to read and read and read as a child
    http://www.filmlinc.com/fcm/ja07/mailer1.htm

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    July/August 2007 Riding the Whirlwind: Norman Mailer talks with Michael Chaiken about his independent filmmaking exploits Tough Guys Don’t Dance and Maidstone screen at the Walter Reade Theater on July 2 as part of Film Comment Selects. An onstage discussion with Mailer will take place between screenings. Click here to purchase tickets. The Executioner’s Song will screen on August 5. Buy tickets here Michael Chaiken: You were a voracious reader as kid. How central was the moviegoing experience for you growing up? Norman Mailer: Movies were dessert. I used to read and read and read as a child. I remember seeing Captain Blood [35] with Errol Flynn in a movie theater that was 10 blocks away from my home in Brooklyn on one of the coldest winter nights New York ever had. Walking home that night, I got frostbite on my thighs that lasted for a month. My thighs got discolored it was so cold, but it was worth it because that movie was so wonderful. That movie probably gave me more pleasure than any I have ever seen. Put it this way, if a meal at a given time could alter your life—it’s not as easy for a dessert to do that. But this dessert did. I think Captian Blood affected me permanently. It’s a fabulous film.

    59. Majikthise : Norman Mailer
    Saturday I ran across this video of norman mailer and Rip Torn having a real fight from almost 40 years ago. Say what you want about Mr. mailer,
    http://majikthise.typepad.com/majikthise_/2007/11/norman-mailer.html
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    60. Norman Mailer
    A bibliography of norman mailer s books, with the latest releases, covers, descriptions and availability.
    http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/m/norman-mailer/
    Fantastic Fiction Authors M Norman Mailer Preferences google_ad_client = "pub-4149752303753296";google_alternate_ad_url = "http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/frames/banner.htm";google_ad_width = 468;google_ad_height = 60;google_ad_format = "468x60_as";google_ad_type = "text_image";google_ad_channel ="5061332721";google_color_border = "6699CC";google_color_bg = "003366";google_color_link = "FFFFFF";google_color_url = "AECCEB";google_color_text = "AECCEB"; Home Awards New Books Coming Soon ... Years Browse Authors A H O V ... U
    Norman Mailer
    (Norman Kingsley Mailer) Search Authors Search Books About Norman Mailer Norman Mailer was born in 1923 and published his first book, The Naked and the Dead, in 1948. The Armies of the Night won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize in 1969; Mailer received another Pulitzer in 1980 for The Executioner's Song. Novels The Naked and the Dead Barbary Shore The Deer Park The Presidential Papers ... The Castle in the Forest Collections Advertisements for Myself Deaths for the Ladies: And Other Disasters Existential Errands Short Fiction of Norman Mailer ... Modest Gifts: Poems And Drawings (poems) Non fiction The White Negro The Armies of the Night: History As a Novel / The Novel As History Miami and the Siege of Chicago: An Informal History of the Republican and Democratic Conventions of 1968 A Fire on the Moon ... Into the Mirror: The Life of Robert P. Hanssen

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