"Thoughtful and erudite with surprising twists of humor, J. Michael Lennon's Mailer's Last Days is an exciting blend of literary genres. It is a master class in American and English Literature with poignant episodes of his own life as a boy, as a novice professor, as Mailer's biographer, archivist and close friend. The book takes us on a journey to the work of writers such as Joan Didion, Don DeLillo, James Jones, Graham Greene, Elizabeth Bishop and Ezra Pound. In a nutshell, it's an immersion into the American cultural and literary life of the Twentieth Century."
--Susan Mailer, In Another Place: With and Without My Father
Norman Mailer
"Lively, informative, by turns analytical and poignant, Michael Lennon's omnium gatherum opens a wide window on the post-war American literary scene, framed by Mailer's astonishing career. Baldwin, Bishop, Didion, Jones, Lowell, McCarthy, Stone, and Vidal are among those who appear in this rich collection. And beneath it all, beats the book's true heart: Lennon's pursuit of his own distant father and his 'adopted father'--Norman Mailer."
--Robert J. Begiebing, Norman Mailer at 100: Conversations, Correlations, Confrontations
"J. Michael Lennon elevates literary sensibilities as he seamlessly blends memoir, essays, and reviews in his innovative collection. With adroit storytelling marked by wit, honesty, and awareness, Lennon crafts arresting tales that create the portrait of a biographer. Lennon's enthralling prose is a joy to read."
--Nancy McKinley, St. Christopher on Pluto
"By turns deeply personal and remarkably selfless in its attention to others, this uniquely devised memoir is also a moving love letter to literature. Each essay is eloquent, erudite, and engaging, an inspiring testament to the value of Lennon's literary life, and the abiding and meaningful friendship it yielded."
--Maggie McKinley, Understanding Norman Mailer
"J. Michael Lennon accompanies us on a journey through American literary life, introducing us to the greats he's known, and pointing out, with sympathy unusual among distinguished critics, that perhaps the worst thing that can happen to a creative soul is to become famous."
--Charles J. Shields, Lorraine Hansberry: The Life Behind A Raisin in the Sun
"One would be hard pressed to find a more eloquent gentleman than Michael J. Lennon--scholar, raconteur, devourer of books and connoisseur of the stories behind them. That Lennon has come out from behind the scenes of literary legend Norman Mailer's life and oeuvre is a gift not only to the first-rate literature of which he writes but to anyone who loves good stories with a dash of sass, a dose of philosophy and big gulpfuls of heart. A hybrid of biography, memoir, and criticism, this book is so compelling I wanted more Lennon long after the last page. I cannot praise this book enough."
--Beverly Donofrio, Riding in Cars with Boys and Astonished
"I loved this book, and not simply because I have an endless appetite for Mailer, but because Lennon has satisfied a craving I didn't know I had: for a collection that packs the emotion of a memoir and the insight of literary criticism. It's a candid, original, beautifully written collection that provides moving portraits of two powerful writers and the intersection of their lives."
--Jonathan Eig, Ali: A Life