Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.


or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
More Buying Choices
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
An American Dream
 
See larger image
 

An American Dream [Paperback]

Norman Mailer
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 17.00
Price: CDN$ 12.41 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
You Save: CDN$ 4.59 (27%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca. Gift-wrap available.
Only 1 left in stock--order soon (more on the way).
Want it delivered Tuesday, May 29? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout.

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $12.41  
Mass Market Paperback --  
Audio, Cassette --  

Product Details


Product Description

Review

"A writer of the greatest and most reckless talents."
The New Yorker

"A devastatingly alive and original creative mind."
Life

"A work of fierce concentration. . . . Perfectly, and often brilliantly, realistic [with] . . . a pattern of remarkable imaginative coherence and intensity."
Harper's

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.

Tag this product

 (What's this?)
Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
Your tags: Add your first tag
 

 

Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Da' Bomb by Mailer, Oct 16 2001
By 
Ross Morrison (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: An American Dream (Paperback)
Proust? James? Joyce? They're great writers but why would I want to read about lives so similar to my own? I can't lounge around in posh hotel lobbies posturing and reeking of decadent snobbery while I woo impressionable young women if I'm wasting my time reading about it! I know people who loudly renounce authors whom they have never read. I know people who feel instant self gratification upon knowing that there might be someone in the room who hasn't read DeLillo's Underworld. But I have never known anyone of any intelligence who doesn't get a kick out of Mailer. He's Jackie Collins with brass balls. An American Dream is a darkly entertaining, well-written, escapist saga. The characters are interesting and active, and the ideas are sometimes brutish, but so is life. Sure, mentioning Mailer might draw snickers from the tweed-and-elbow-patch crowd, but the porn-loving high-school senior in all of us should be allowed to have a good read once in a while!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars -, May 25 2004
This review is from: An American Dream (Paperback)
God.. i'm so tired of reading posts that endlessly and pedantically harp-on mailer's philosophizing, and theorizing and wordage - both his number and style, calling finally to his use of "mumbo-jumbo" or mystic insights; far-out or nihilism/debauchery depicting imagery and symbolism to debunk him. Yes, his sentences are overlong; yes he can be overblown and fancy; yes, he's a cool cat with a self-styled poet's reputation to prove. Overwrought, overcooked metaphors abound. Fusillades of words come out of no where. He's an onslaught and sensory overload; and his prose is charged with an almost psychopathic zeal/fervor. But that's the point. Remove any of that from the question, the mania of his style, and you topple the foundation of one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. And if you don't like this book for the aforementioned reasons, try to read his Armies of the Night, a pulitizer prize winner, quite a contrast to his other pulitzer prize winner, Exe's Son, which is very economically and even stoicly written. in E. S., Mailer writes with the detached eye of the scientific observer, the objective, unimposing journalist, cataloging and chronicaling a nearly recoved ex-con's slow descent with a befriending family into a murdering rage. It's a spit in the eye at the stifling effects of american conventionality. But it's spit that needs no embellishment, no elaboration. The argument is there implicitly. Nothing needs to be added or tacked on, there is no rabble-rousing, no polemic or paen to the evils or the goods of prison and the manifestly holy image of "prisoner" established in Mailer's philosophical vocabulary. He's impossibly restrained. None of his personality is present at all. But in his first foray into nonfiction, his verbose tendencies return, and some of the phases he uses, "burgeoning meat" for example, to describe high-schoolers, smile-faced and bouncing around in the back of a school bus, is a bit overdone.
But we live in an age where concision and snappiness of expression has come to supersede and override in importance the need to be beautiful. Our own industrial efficency has become our partner in literary efficency. We don't read linearly, we don't care about the substantive interdependency of words, we don't look for paragraphs that have a certain tensile neatness, where not a single word can be removed or added. We want essences. We want the trees without the ornaments. We want variety, diversity offered up in pill-sized portions, so that we can maximize our multicultural apprecation. We want that. Not probing philosophical mediations on - in contemporary terms - outdated social figures: the seemingly ordinary man, snapping and killing his wife (mailer called marriage an "excrementious relatioship". The two parties sling feces at one another. The marriages that last are the ones which survive on the brink of maddening vindictiveness and intensity.)

It's important that I mention marriage because the main character's own growth describes in a certain fashion the arc of a marriage, a marriage with American ideals. In effect, by killing the woman he marries, the woman who embodies all the unspeakably infuriating hyporcises and sanctimonies of America during the sixiies, he in effect kills his own past self, the underdeveloped man-boy who loved father, flag, and country dearly, and who was eventually betrayed by all. So his latter journey though the seamy night-life, the medieval savergy, the "on the vergeness" of bedlam, that sordid nyc can be like - can't we all remember the black out? - is a journey to find who he was, a journey, from beginning as a duely honored and decorated a war hero, to a drug-addled, booze-swilling, knife-fighting deviant new york hedonist, a man who fights for his own pleasure and lives on the edge of suicide and murder because he knows in a world full of absurdities living like that is the least absurd to do. It's an allegory for the happy days of lovey-dovey, "oh be still my heart" marriage, to the days when one gleefully and amorally goes out with a bunch of friends to pick up a group of big-breasted floozies to boink and throw away. The fakeness of the world that surrounds us and the consequent lack of simtulation we find in it, can sometimes resemble the very fakeness and disenchantment of a 20 year-old marriage. The intolerability of it and the freaknick that we experience when we break away from its banal binds, the desire to be bon vivants, men-about-town, is almost irresistible. Rojack simply carries this to the most extreme degree, loosing all inhibition and cutting away the veneers of happy american life that trammeled him and his heart for so long.

So it's really a story of redemption, redemption followed by purging. It's a cankerous, infected mass the american center of ideals, and the only way to break away from it is to excise it, chop it out cleanly and live like a philosophical freak, one who ostensibly defies all sense and reason.

There is of course the added sidenote that this character, Rojack, is a near doppleganger of Mailer. He's an ex-politican, mailered tried running for mayor once or twice, a war hero, mailer fancied himself one even though all he did was cut-potatoes and type, and a public figure, which mailer is, and a wife killer, which mailer attempted but failed to be.

This really is the quintessential tome of secret Mailer fantasies, and a story from becoming one's country's hero but conversely one's own enemy, to becoming one's countries enemy to one's own hero.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2.0 out of 5 stars Not his best, Jan 28 2004
By 
Jim Huang "huajima" (Boston, MA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: An American Dream (Paperback)
I couldn't believe this is the author of "The Naked and the Dead", "Harlot's Ghost", and "The Executioner's Song"! I think for this book Mailer tried a little too hard to be "cool", "stylistic", whatever, and ended up looking like an unconvincing show-off. Not worth the trouble.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 33 reviews  3.6 out of 5 stars 
 
 
Most recent customer reviews











Only search this product's reviews



Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject









i.e., each book must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...

Feedback


Amazon.ca Privacy Statement Amazon.ca Shipping Information Amazon.ca Returns & Exchanges