Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Tue, 04/27/2010 - 3:04pm
05/20/2010 6:30 pm
05/20/2010 7:30 pm
Cedar Grove Library Presents
Norris Church Mailer
A Ticket to the Circus
A great American love story, this warm, funny, revealing memoir
introduces the world to Norman Mailer’s greatest inspiration, his wife
of more than thirty years. Like Zelda Fitzgerald before her, Norris
Church Mailer has led a life as large and as colorful as her
husband’s—and every bit as engaging.
Growing up a strict Free
Will Baptist in the South of the 1950s, Norris Church, christened
Barbara Jean Davis, was crowned “Little Miss Little Rock” at the age of
three and always knew that life had more to offer her than the comforts
of small-town Arkansas. But she could never have guessed that in her
early twenties she would date future president Bill Clinton (and predict
his national victory even after he lost his first run for Congress), or
that the following year she would meet Norman Mailer, who was passing
through town giving a lecture at the local college. They fell in love in
one night—and their marriage lasted thirty-three years.
Despite
her enduring love for the man, Norris found life with the writer full of
challenges—from carving out her own niche in the wake of five ex-wives
and numerous former girlfriends, to easing her way into the hearts of
her seven stepchildren, to negotiating the ferocious world of Mailer’s
fame, friends, and literary life. The couple’s New York parties were
legendary, and their social circle included such luminaries as Muhammad
Ali, Jacqueline Kennedy, Truman Capote, Gore Vidal, and Imelda Marcos.
Their
decades-long obsession with each other, as seen in the intimate letters
that Norris reveals here for the first time, was not without tests and
infidelities; theirs was a marriage full of friendship, betrayal,
doubts, understanding, and deep, complicated, lifelong passion.
With
southern charm and wit, Norris Church Mailer depicts the full evolution
of her life, from her childhood all the way through her intense
marriage with Norman and his heartbreaking death. This unforgettable
memoir will enchant readers with its honesty and insight into how we
grow up and how we love.