July 2, 2024: Difference between revisions

From Gerald R. Lucas
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Oh, and of course Mailer’s famous letter to ''Playboy'', dated December 21, 1962: {{cquote|I wish you hadn’t billed the debate between William Buckley and myself as a meeting between a conservative and a liberal. I don’t care if people call me a radical, a rebel, a red, a revolutionary, an outsider, an outlaw, a Bolshevik, an anarchist, a nihilist, or even a left conservative, but please don’t ever call me a liberal.}} I know how he feels.
Oh, and of course Mailer’s famous letter to ''Playboy'', dated December 21, 1962: {{cquote|I wish you hadn’t billed the debate between William Buckley and myself as a meeting between a conservative and a liberal. I don’t care if people call me a radical, a rebel, a red, a revolutionary, an outsider, an outlaw, a Bolshevik, an anarchist, a nihilist, or even a left conservative, but please don’t ever call me a liberal.}} I know how he feels.
And that’s about it. At least I have to call it for today and head to the airport. I’m going to comb through the database once more to see if there’s anything else I should be looking at—maybe in the mid-eighties when he was publishing ''The Essential Mailer'' (1982) in England and the hardback version of ''SFNM'' (1980) or when he was working on ''The Time of Our Time'' (1998) in the nineties.
OK, time to see the family!


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[[Category:07/2024]]
[[Category:07/2024]]
[[Category:Mailer’s Short Fiction]]
[[Category:Mailer’s Short Fiction]]

Latest revision as of 15:09, 2 July 2024

Arrival Day

Just a few hours until Autumn and the boys arrive! I requested three boxes this morning, which maybe my last few. Today’s walk seemed particularly hot, but I made it into the HRC by 10:00 ready to do some work. The owner of my cottage said that I could keep it through July 7, so as of today, my official plan is to leave early that morning. Good thing, too, as Hurricane Beryl could be coming to town. That is something I’ll have to watch.

Not too much today, as expected. While not apropos, Box 559 contained an interesting paragraph that Mailer wrote for Harper’s in 1962, based on their solicitation: “ANTI-DOTES... This game—devised by Michael Menzies, and which any number can play—provides the tonic exhilaration of voicing anathemas. It is a matter of answering a dozen questions: Which PLAY... BOOK... [etc. . . .] has seemed to you dismal, disastrous and distasteful; and, if you care to comment, why?”. Here’s Mailer’s paragraph:

Oh, and of course Mailer’s famous letter to Playboy, dated December 21, 1962:

I know how he feels.

And that’s about it. At least I have to call it for today and head to the airport. I’m going to comb through the database once more to see if there’s anything else I should be looking at—maybe in the mid-eighties when he was publishing The Essential Mailer (1982) in England and the hardback version of SFNM (1980) or when he was working on The Time of Our Time (1998) in the nineties.

OK, time to see the family!