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Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery (1996)

Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery (1996)

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Rating
3.83 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0345404378 (ISBN13: 9780345404374)
Language
English
Publisher
random house trade paperbacks

About book Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery (1996)

In this epic work, Norman Mailer shows the complexity that is Lee Harvey Oswald and leaves the reader to determine: Did he have the soul of a Killer? Mailer begins with Oswald’s trip to Russia and works backward through Oswald’s early family life, then forward with through his return to the US with his Russian wife. I took this book on a long flight (next trip I’m digital), so If I hadn’t been a captive audience, I wouldn’t have finished it. The early part is almost straight reporting, covering in more detail Oswald's Russian life, previously covered in Marina and Lee. The book gets a lot better and held my attention as it progressed.The text is comprised of excerpts from the reports of the Warren Commission and the House Select Committee on Assassination, transcripts from the FBI and Russian intelligence services (some are conversations from Oswald’s bugged apartment), interviews by Mailer and Larry Schiller, the work of Priscella McMillan, Norman Posner, and Edward Epstein and a few other sources. Each is introduced with a pithy narrative using the “royal we” that sets the stage or interprets what is to come. While Mailer does not give an opinion on whether Oswald did the deed, he does have an opinion on its aftermath: for the intelligence establishment, a trial would be explosive since Mafia-CIA-FBI links would be revealed. Mailer notes, throughout, that while the 26 volume Warren Commission Report (which relied on FBI and CIA staff) leaves too many loose ends, it does provide a wealth of information on people and life in the US at this time. There is important but spotty documentation of dates and activities but, as Mailer notes more time was spent investigating everyone on the public bus Oswald took to Mexico than Oswald’s pro and anti Castro associates in New Orleans.There is material I had not seen elsewhere. For instance there are interviews of Oswald’s acquaintances in Minsk that Mailer and his associates had in the 1990’s showing how just knowing Oswald affected their lives and careers. There is insight into the dilemma Oswald’s presence in Russia and his later “fame" posed for the KGB. Oswald’s stint in the Marines shows possible early on intelligence involvement in Japan. While Mailer says too much is made of Oswald's dubious sexuality Mailer shows possible roots of it in the Marines. The intent of the book is to assess the character of Oswald but you also get interpretive portraits of his mother Marguerite, his “friend” George de Mohrenschildt, Marina’s uncle and aunt in Minsk, her friend Ruth Paine and of Jack Ruby. The description of talk show host William Kirk Stuckey’s treatment of Oswald is one of the many short personality profiles that deliver wider perspective.The book badly needs an index. On p. 703 Allan Dulles seems to be questioning Oswald while in custody in Dallas. I flipped back but could find no context. Maybe this was an editorial glitch and the questions were from the Warren Commission a year later. (Dulles later appears at a small dinner party given by Jackie Kennedy’s mother and stepfather along with George de Mohrenschildt. What it means for a daughter when her mother invites a known friend of her daughter’s husband'salleged assassin is not explored). Dulles’s interest in keeping a lid on things would be apparent, particularly to anyone who read The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles & Their Secret World War.I am not sure where this fits in the mountains of material on this topic. It hardly makes a notice in material on Mailer and his body of work. It is the Mailer voice with his Mailer take, and while 20 years old, the prose is not dated. This book unites many primary sources with insightful commentary. After the first 200 pages, it kept me occupied on a long flight.

Over the last forty years I have read far too many books on the Kennedy assassination to be considered healthy. It is quite easy to be persuaded by presentations of specious evidence and half-baked conspiracy theories. This book, albeit not one of Mailer's best efforts, was the last book I ever ever read on the subject. The portrait of Oswald which Mailer's paints in broad strokes as he embarks on his own personal pilgrimage through the files of the House Select Committee and the KGB archives is simply irrefutable. Whatever he was in fact, in spite of his uncanny and precocious associations, Lee Oswald was beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty the man who pulled the trigger which ended Camelot. And he was a sad little man, a wannabe and a naif. I shared Mailer's combination of revulsion and empathy for this truly pitiable young man who desperately wanted to matter in a world which took little notice. To be frank, the smug and lawyerly books of Gerald Posner, which thoroughly and definitely document the case against Oswald, only managed to piss me off. It took Mailer's literary sensitivity to drive the final nail in Oswald's coffin. In the end, Oswald's guilt becomes self-evident in the simple act of leaving his wedding ring lying on the dresser beside his wages on that warm November morning in Dallas forty-nine years ago. The ballistics and the eyewitnesses and the paper trail only confirm what should have been obvious from the start. Oswald was a twenty-four year old nobody who went out that day to become history. He succeeded, but we've all been paying his debts since.

Do You like book Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery (1996)?

The Kennedy assassination was first rumored during afternoon recess from Lincoln Junior High School. It being Park Ridge, Illinois, a number of seventh graders took it as good news. No one doubted the rumor. I was asked by another kid who'd become president now and had to think for a moment before coming up with Lyndon B. Johnson.After recess we were taken from class to the downstairs auditorium where we were addressed, solemnly, by Clifford Sweat, our principal. The teachers all appeared serious, very serious--probably worried about our sensitivities, about how this important news ought be conveyed to a bunch of thirteen and fourteen year olds. The snide remarks of the children of conservatives ceased. We were sent home.The next several days my family, like many others, was glued to the television, hearing rumors coalesce into "facts"; watching Johnson sworn in on Airforce One with the bloodied widow beside him; seeing the putative assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, himself assassinated by a former Chicago hood, Jack Ruby, while in Dallas police custody; witnessing the world-historical funeral procession in Washington, the burial in Arlington. The weeks that followed saw the print media cover the same material with detailed chronologies in Time, glossy color photographs in Life. The months that followed saw the hurried publication of the Warren Commission Report and the first of the books to question it, Mark Lane's Rush to Judgment.It was probably a year or two later that I actually heard Lane himself interviewed on the radio and began my occasional forays into studying the assassination, studies which have included the reading of scores of books, of which Mailer's is the latest.I do not subscribe to Mailer's conclusion that Oswald likely was the sole gunman, but then determining the facts of the assassination itself is not his primary concern. He and his colleagues appear to be intellectually honest and note many of the contradictions and loose threads which were left by the official accounts of the FBI and the Commission. They also attack, more than once, Posner's recent apologetic for the government's story. No, their concern is more for the character of Oswald and on this account they make a valuable contribution, primarily by going to the effort to interview many of his associates (and the KGB operatives who kept tabs on him) from his two-plus years in the Soviet Union, many of whom have never been interviewed before. What emerges is a believable, often sympathetic, portrait of a person both ordinary in the lower middle class trajectory of his life and extraordinary in terms of the means by which he tried, sometimes successfully, to transcend his background and conditioning.I've read a bunch of Mailer over the years, liking his non-fiction more than his fiction. The most recent books of his read have been Ancient Evenings, an ambitious failure, and his The Gospel According to the Son, another, rather poor, rather uninspired, attempt to represent the person of Jesus. This biography is worth reading both for the value of its reportage and the high quality of its prose.
—Erik Graff

If you like to read, and like to live with books, you learn that some books wait, shyly, for a mutual friend to say “I think you two might like each other.” Sometimes the fix-up doesn’t work — you just say yes, you take your chances — but when it does you feel grateful to that friend, forever, that he knew you like that. Knew the two of you, you and the book.Manny at Book Soup is one of those friends. Book Soup is on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. Everything around it keeps closing, but Book Soup remains, independent, ornery, seen it all and has lived to tell about it. A few months ago I saw they had Norman Mailer’s OSWALD’S GHOST on the front desk, by the cash register. I knew that Manny loved Mailer and asked him about this book. “Just read it,” he said. So I bought it, making a big deal about its being a real book, with pages, and a cover, and that real book smell (I like my Kindle, and have many titles on it. But Kindle books don’t smell.) I thought — am I that interested in Oswald? I am old enough to remember the sight of Jack Ruby shooting him in the gut, live, in 1963. But six hundred pages? When there are so many show business biographies to read, and books about the Holocaust?It’s a winner. It’s not about Oswald, not really, but about Mailer’s novelist’s attempt to force him into being a character in a narrative that makes any sense at all. There’s a blankness to Oswald, in death as in life, and OSWALD’S GHOST is the perfect title as it’s the ghost who is the author’s opponent. He goes to Russia, gets the KGB to open files, interviews the sinister set of kooks attached to the case. He tries to make sense of the Warren Report, and of the terrifying creature known as Marguerite Oswald, or Mom. By the end Mailer isn’t convinced that Oswald did or didn’t do it, and it’s his triumph as an artist that by the end you don’t care about that. Because you have been all over the world with a marvelous companion, one who can go off on the occasional tangent but always finds his way back to home, with a bagful of new stories to tell. Mailer took on Oswald, as he took on Marilyn, because as an American author of his time he felt he had to drag them into the ring with him, and see who was left standing. Two people, about whom the truth could never be known, facing a great writer with his dukes up.And so, on to the Hitler book … (CASTLE IN THE FOREST)(One interesting supposition of Mailer’s … he feels that Oswald could hardly have intended to be shot by Ruby, and that his goal might have been to have a Day in Court, during which he could air his not entirely crazy views about the workings of the secret world. He was, as Mailer sees it, a not very interesting young man (he was twenty-three when he did or didn’t pull the trigger) who knew it about himself, who hated that it was true, who tried to make it not be true and the rest is — history, as seen, invaluably, by Norman Mailer.Thank you, Manny.
—Richard Kramer

If you are looking to expand upon your knowledge of the various theories surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, this book is a must-read. Having made my way through numerous books on the subject, most of which were based on the notion that the Mafia and CIA were implicated with varying degrees of involvement, Mailer's book was the first I'd come across that argued the theory of Oswald as the lone gunman. While it is easy to be persuaded in either direction with all of the evidence (or in certain cases, lack of evidence) that has been presented over the years, up until the reading of Oswald's Tale, I'd been utterly convinced that a major conspiracy lingered just below the surface of what the US government has chosen to reveal with the release and withholding of pertinent documents over the decades since the assassination. Norman Mailer's account of Oswald's life gave pause to these previously held certainties, and it was done with the style and flair of Mailer's famous prose. This book might not completely sway conspiracy theorists from their ideas about what happened that awful day, but it will make them think. And since we will likely never know the full scope of this terrible crime, Mailer's objective account is a valuable resource helpful in discerning truth from outlandish fiction.
—Richelle

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