Shots In The Dark
Saturday, November 10, 2007
  The Naked and...
Norman Mailer has died of kidney failure.

It is a huge, irreplaceable loss.

When he was young, Mailer said, "fiction was everything. The novel, the big novel, the driving force. We all wanted to be Hemingway ... I don't think the same thing can be said anymore. I don't think my work has inspired any writer, not the way Hemingway inspired me."

I hope that isn't true; in fact, I know that isn't true, for, though I am not a novelist nor could I even approximate Mailer's stature as a writer, he was a huge inspiration to me.

On first reading "The Naked and the Dead," I found it a revelation, a testament to the combined powers of imagination, creativity, and reportage. I have urged more people than I could count to read it since, as a demonstration of what a novel can and ought to be.

And when I was in college and read "The Executioner's Song," I thought to myself, this is what journalism can do. Even though it's not entirely journalism.

He lived a life full of mistakes, inconsistences, irritants, arrogance, brilliance, wonder, and most of all, passion.

He lived a life.
 
Comments:
what a beautiful testimony/obit
 
A life of passion -

"One does, in the course of a writing life, create a lot of hostility. I think I'd almost rather have it that way than have people say, ‘Oh, what a nice guy,' and let it go at that. Why? The other way around nobody gets excited about you. You're respected, but no one's going to die for you. And I think a healthy person should be able to die for a few ideas—and can feel well loved if a few are ready to go all the way for him or her. But we are on terribly untenable grounds." - Norman Mailer

Now that's a great philosophy to live by. A great man, not perfect, but great.

eayny
 
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Name: Richard Bradley
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