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Tough Guys Don't Dance by Norman Mailer
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Tough Guys Don't Dance

by Norman Mailer

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417112,312 (3.13)None
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Random House (1984), Edition: !st, Hardcover, 229 pages

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Not much fun and not much of a mystery. I can't for the life of me think of why Mailer would have taken what must have been at least a certain amount of time to write this book. For money is the only answer I can come up with. Did he make any? I guess so, since they made a movie out of it and that must have put something into his pocket. ( )
  jburlinson | Nov 7, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0375508740, Hardcover)

A dark, brilliant novel of astonishing pitch, set in Provincetown, a “spit of shrub and dune” captured here in the rawness and melancholy of the off-season, Tough Guys Don’t Dance is the story of Tim Madden, an unsuccessful writer addicted to bourbon, cigarettes, and blonde, careless women with money. On the twenty-fourth morning after the decampment of his wife, Patty Lareine, he awakens with a hangover, considerable sexual excitement, and, on his upper arm, a red tattoo bearing a name from the past. Of the night before, he remembers practically nothing. What he soon learns is that the front passenger seat of his Porsche is soaked with blood and that in a secluded corner of his marijuana stash in a nearby woods rests a blonde head, severed at the throat.
Is Madden therefore a murderer? He has no way of knowing. As in many novels of crime, the narrative centers on violence—physical, sexual, and emotional—but these elements move in their orbits through a rich constellation of character as Madden tries to reconstruct the missing hours of a terrible evening. In the course of this in-quiry a bizarre and vividly etched gallery of characters reappears to him as in a dream—ex-prizefighters, sexual junkies, mediums, former cons, a police chief, a world-weary former girl friend, and Mad-den’s father, old now but still a Herculean figure, a practitioner of the sternest backroom ethics.
Tough Guys Don’t Dance represents Mailer at the peak of his powers with a stunningly conceived novel that soon transcends its origins as a mystery to become a relentless search into the recesses and buried virtues of the modern American male. Rarely, as many readers will discern, have the paradoxes of machismo and homosexuality been so well explored.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)

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