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Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery by Norman Mailer
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Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery

by Norman Mailer

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233224,563 (3.6)1
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Random House Trade Paperbacks (2007), Paperback, 848 pages

Member:kswolff
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:novel, fiction, JFK, assassination
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Like new hardcover, like new dust jacket ( )
  rudygunn | Mar 20, 2009 |
Forget Crossfire and read this instead! ( )
  simonson | Apr 12, 2007 |
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Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories

Lee Harvey Oswald

Oswald's Tale

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0679425357, Hardcover)

"MARVELOUS . . . BREATHTAKING."
--The New York Times Book Review
"MAILER SHINES . . . Explaining Kennedy's assassination through the flaws in Oswald's character has been attempted before, notably by Gerald Posner in Case Closed and Don Delillo in Libra. But neither handled Oswald with the kind of dexterity and literary imagination that Mailer here supplies in great force. . . . Oswald's Tale weaves a story not only about Oswald or Kennedy's death but about the culture surrounding the assassination, one that remains replete with miscomprehensions, unraveled threads and lack of resolution: All of which makes Oswald's Tale more true-to-life than any fact-driven treatise could hope to be. . . . Vintage Mailer."
--The Philadelphia Inquirer
"FASCINATING . . . A MASTER STORYTELLER . . . Mailer gives us our clearest, deepest view of Oswald yet. . . . Inside three pages you are utterly absorbed."
--Detroit Free Press
"MAILER AT HIS BEST . . . LIVELY AND CONVINCING . . . EXTREMELY
LUCID . . . Mailer is fierce, courageous, and reckless and nearly everything he writes has sections of headlong brilliance. . . . [He] has found a way to make the dry bones of KGB tapes and his own interviews stand up and perform. . . . From the American master conjurer of dark and swirling purpose, a moving reflection."
--Robert Stone
The New York Review of Books
"THIS IS A NARRATIVE OF TREMENDOUS ENERGY AND PANACHE; THE AUTHOR AT THE TOP OF HIS FORM."
--Christopher Hitchens
Financial Times
"Mailer has written some pretty crazy books in his time, but this isn't one of them. Like its predecessor, Harlot's Ghost, it is the performance of an author relishing the force and reach of his own acuity."
--Martin Amis
The London Sunday Times

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)

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