Of Women and Their Elegance

Of Women and Their Elegance is an imaginary memoir about Marilyn Monroe by the author of The Naked and the Dead, The Armies of the Night, and The Executioner's Song, Norman Mailer. The book uses photographs taken by Milton H. Greene in combination with real interviews that Monroe did participate in. The book is written completely in first person, and repeatedly expresses the innermost thoughts of Monroe. There are also photos by Greene of other celebrities like Audrey Hepburn, Judy Garland, Ava Gardner, and Jane Fonda.

The majority of the book is centered on Monroe's conversations and interactions with Greene and Arthur Miller, her third husband. There are no interactions between Mailer and Monroe in the book.

This book was published in 1980, eighteen years after Monroe's death. Mailer never met Monroe in real life, but this is the second book that he has published about her. The first was Marilyn: A Biography in 1973.

Reception

Mailer anticipated backlash and criticism for writing an imaginary memoir about Monroe, and in the November 10, 1980 issue of New York Magazine, he wrote a piece defending Of Women and Their Elegance. He wrote, "Before the Literary Bar: In which the author puts his new Marilyn Monroe book on trial—before critics do." He wrote the article as if it was a transcript from a courtroom defending his work. At the end of the work The Court says, "I will say that I have read the book and consider it a serious enough work to give Mr. Mailer a fair opportunity of avoiding outright censure."[1] Mailer knew that he would receive backlash for creating fictional interviews and stories as if they were real, but wanted readers to not completely dismiss his work before they had read it.

References

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