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An American Dream (Flamingo Modern Classics) [Paperback]

Norman Mailer
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Flamingo; (Reissue) edition (13 Jun 1994)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 058609170X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0586091708
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 12.8 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,040,038 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Norman Mailer
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Product Description

Review

‘Mailer writes like an angel – a master of small surprises that are precursors of seismic shocks.’
London Review of Books

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Description

Stephen Rojack is a decorated war hero, a former Congressman, and a certified public intellectual with his own television show. He is also married to the very rich, very beautiful, and utterly amoral Deborah Caughlin Kelly. But one night, in the prime of his existence, he hears the moon talking to him on the terrace of a fashionable New York high-rise, and it is urging him to kill himself. It is almost as a defense against that infinitely seductive voice that Rojack murders his wife.

In this wild battering ram of a novel, which was originally published to vast controversy in 1965, Norman Mailer creates a character who might be a fictional precursor of the philosopher-killer he would later profile in The Executioner's Song. As Rojack runs amok through the city in which he was once a privileged citizen, Mailer peels away the layers of our social norms to reveal a world of pure appetite and relentless cruelty. Sensual, horrifying, and informed by a vision that is one part Nietzsche, one part de Sade, and one part Charlie Parker, An American Dream grabs the reader by the throat and refuses to let go. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Despite the outwardly satirical connotations behind the title of An American Dream, this novel is far less a political or intellectual attack on his homeland as it is a foray into the existential limits of Mailer's own mind.

The core of the book is a simple tale of the battle between the good and bad forces within a man's soul. The lead character and narrator of the story, Stephen Rojack, is not for the most part a bad person, and yet his actions are occasionally very bad indeed. By the end of the very first chapter, Rojack has already committed a single brutal act which will propel him forward into a life of deceit and fear and eventual tragedy.

From that moment onwards he becomes a victim of his own defiant temerity before his nation's laws and the morality of a culture he does not particularly value. His lack of conformity and his intelligence combine to destroy him, and at the end of the book it his only his primitive courage, the quintessence of his being as a man, that he is expected to rely on. The fates, angered by his gall, are left to exact their revenge via another to whom he has grown close during the whole ordeal. Thus eventually he receives his comeuppance, albeit indirectly.

Here we see Mailer depicting with great enthusiasm and earnestness the criminal elements of New York, and combining this grim setting with the inner thoughts and meditations of a man open to new interpretations of the world. The influence of writers such as Burroughs and Henry Miller are clearly visible in the incredible wealth of metaphors and the very obliqueness of the perspective which he takes on so many subjects.

It is here that the author excels, producing an extraordinarily rich prose, absolutely overflowing with ideas and confirming Mailer as one of the most resourceful and perspicacious voices in literature. But, unlike many of the novel's most patently obvious influences, An American Dream is written with such skill as to enable the philosophical, moral, and spiritual dimensions to run quite seamlessly alongside a thriller; a story with strong, believable characters.

An American Dream is not perfect. Against it can be levelled accusations of misogyny (two major female characters are murdered), dadaism (particularly in one rather dated and ill-conceived section involving anal intercourse) and, most significantly, it can be argued that the ending is perhaps a little too contrived, a little too symmetrical in relation to the novel's start.

One can imagine the author, after 200 pages of genius - after writing chapters which he might not have believed himself capable of writing - alone before his unfinished manuscript and utterly at a loss as to how to complete the work. I cannot say with conviction if there is any truth to this, but the book certainly reads like a final loss of courage. To be made to find an ending for a book like An American Dream is an unenviable task. It is so strong, it is so unmanageable in its scope.... Perhaps it should have been a longer novel. Perhaps if any of Mailer's novels needed to be 500 words-plus to be entirely complete, this was the one. But then it might have lost much of its immediacy and precision.

However, do not allow the nit-pickings of this humble reader put you off. Mailer himself once wrote it was his opinion that An American Dream was, sentence-for-sentence, one of the best books of the century. He wrote that some years ago and he may well have changed his mind since then, although I sincerely hope that he hasn't for he was right first time. As a demonstration of literary prowess - or in more Mailer-like terms, as a flexing of the author's intellectual muscles - the novel has few peers.

And if that's not sufficient to convince you to take a look, it's also a cracking good read!

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Bought on a whim and the only Norman Mailer book I have read, An American Dream is a very very good book indeed. Mailer's prose is as sharp (jagged in places) as I have ever read - if you thought Bret Easton Ellis could be unforgiving, then the first chapter of this will give you something to consider! This is not to say that this book is to be thought of along the same lines as say 'American Psycho' (although there are similarities). The plot itself is rich, with many threads interweaving elegantly around eachother, a fantastic ending. Truly excellent if you are willing to put the effort in.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By reader 451 TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
In some ways, Mailer's An American Dream must have shocked far more when it came out than it does now. Neither the very explicit sex scenes nor the violence are that unusual anymore. Other things, though, may surprise more than they did: the social commentary, for one. What is unusual about An American Dream is that the degeneracy all happens at the top. The protagonist, Stephen Rojack, is an ex-congressman and war hero. He has married an heiress and is confronted with her father, industrial magnate and spy. For another, there is the religious language in which much of Rojack's soul-searching is wrapped: twenty-first century agony would not be signposted in such moral terms. But this is Mailer, and it is unsurprisingly about more than sex and violence.

Yet on some level, this novel could read like an ordinary thriller, a very well-paced thriller at that. Rojack kills his wife early on (no spoiler here). The rest of the novel takes place in the following two days, as we wonder whether he will be caught, whether he'll turn himself in, or fall foul of his father-in-law's underground connections. Rojack goes on a rampage among Mafiosi and female cabaret singers. Nothing is spared in what could be interpreted either as headlong flight or search for atonement: American race relations, the country's war record, among others, are put through the grinder, not to forget TV and New York academia. An American Dream is a literary roller coaster. Be prepared to be shocked in ways you had not expected.
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