An American Dream (1965)

by Norman Mailer



Former Congressman and current alcoholic Stephen Rojack murders his estranged wife, a maven of high society, in a sudden, delirious rage, then throws her body from the window to make it look like suicide.

 


Over the course of the following 36 hours or so, he must deal with the police and his powerful father-in-law and begins a tentative romance with a nightclub singer.

 


Suffering from too much alcohol and too little sleep, his sanity becomes more frayed and his encounters become increasingly surreal.

 


Writing in the first-person perspective of a character whose mind is falling apart, Norman Mailer produces prose that is frequently opaque but never dull, often coming up with startling turns of phrase.

 

Norman Mailer


The landscape of Mailer's American dream is fraught with violence, superstition, and unseemly sex. 



I'm not sure I know what to make of it all, but it certainly is a stimulating ride.


"The American Dream" (Persian)

"The Vision of Pleasure" (Greek)


"American Dream" (Turkish)

"The Nightmare" (German)

"An American Dream" (Portuguese)

"The American Dream" (Finnish)

"An American Dream" (Romanian)

"American Dream" (Polish)

"American Dream" (Czech)

"American Dream" (Croatian)

"An American Dream" (French)

"American Dream" (Russian)






















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