'The Executioner’s Song': The Best Nonfiction Novel Ever Written
'In Cold Blood' is an amazing work, but Norman Mailer's masterpiece edges out Capote's.
My wife’s sister, we’ll call her Wendy, is a fellow book worm. She likes to pick my brain for recommendations whenever we drop in around the holidays to enjoy their hospitality at their farm. (They grow cranberries on a spread in central Wisconsin.)
Suggesting books is a job I relish, but of late it has been getting tougher. I have three children, a full-time job, and less time to read than ever before. We’ve been visiting three or four times a year—Easter, 4th of July, Thanksgiving, and Christmas—for more than a decade now, and my recommendations are growing thin.
Over spiked eggnog on Christmas Eve, Wendy asked me what I had for her.
I thought it over. “You already read The Executioner’s Song, right?”
She hadn’t.
“You need to,” I replied.
Norman Mailer’s Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece is one of the top five books I’ve read in any genre. In my opinion, it’s the best nonfiction novel ever written.
Capote fans will argue In Cold Blood is better. My reply is this: Truman Capote might have created the nonfiction novel, but Norman Mailer perfected it.
For those who are not familiar with Mailer’s book, The Executioner’s Song is a messy criminal odyssey that tells the story of Gary Gilmore, a convict released on parole who returns to Utah to begin his life anew with the help of some family members. It doesn’t go well. After struggling to reintegrate himself into civil society, Gilmore commits two separate murders for no apparent reason. He is caught, charged, found guilty, and sentenced to die. (Gilmore actually demands to die.)
The book is a masterpiece for many reasons, but what is most striking is the depth and scope of the world Mailer conveys. There is enough material in Mailer’s work to make six great books, and the stories are told with unsurpassable restraint.
The writing is at times so simple and direct that one is tempted to believe that Mailer realized the material he had was so compelling that it took no artistry to tell. But that would be a disservice to Mailer and imply something that is not true: The Executioner’s Song is poetry, high art that captures all facets of Gilmore’s life and those he touches—the beautiful and the ugly, the hope, dysfunction, horror, and pain. It’s all revealed matter-of-factly, and the reader can only watch it unfold, helplessly.
If you’re looking to start a great book, I highly recommend it. It’s a pretty long book, but the story moves with such pace it feels like a novella.
But be warned: the book is not for the faint of heart. Many good, honest people are found within the pages, but the book also captures and exposes the nasty underbelly of a culture in great detail, too great, perhaps, for many readers.
Saw the movie. Left me a Rosanna Arquette fan to this day. I have a copy of the book which I purchased years ago after reading Armies of the Night (which is a fun book).I then tried to read Ancient Evenings, which is so bad I couldn’t finish it.Kind of turned me off from reading Mailer.
Mailer was probably the pre eminent author of the second half of the 20th century.
I was a friend of Barbara Norris (Norris Church Mailer) in Arkansas, and introduced to Norman by his old army buddy Francis Irby Gwaltney, who allowed me to read his correspondence with Norman. The correspondence is now at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.
Mailer met Barbara at a party in Russellville, AR that Gwaltney threw in Norman’s honor.
After The Naked and the Dead, Gwaltney wrote The Day the Century ended which a number of critics believe surpassed Mailer’s book describing WW2 in the Pacific.