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  2. Why Are We In Vietnam? (WWVN) is a 1967 novel by the American author Norman Mailer. It focuses on a hunting trip to the Brooks Range in Alaska where a young man is brought by his father, a wealthy businessman who works for a company that makes cigarette filters and is obsessed with killing a grizzly bear. As the novel progresses, the ...

    • Norman Mailer
    • 1967
  3. Why are We in Vietnam?'s teen-angst hero, DJ, is the Burroughs-reading son to a corporate executive, and the novel moves toward the defeat of his individual attempt at rebellion: "the experience of a lifetime excites greed in the common man." Despite the blunt criticisms of managerial values (M.A. Pete being "Medium Asshole Pete"), his young ...

    • (665)
    • Paperback
  4. Both entertaining and profound, Why Are We in Vietnam? is an exceptional, timeless work awaiting discovery by a new generation of readers. Praise for Why Are We in Vietnam? “A book of great integrity. All the old qualities are here: Mailer’s remarkable feeling for the sensory event, the detail, ‘the way it was,’ his power and energy.”

    • Paperback
  5. Amazon.in - Buy Why Are We in Vietnam? book online at best prices in India on Amazon.in. Read Why Are We in Vietnam? book reviews & author details and more at Amazon.in. Free delivery on qualified orders.

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    • Norman Mailer
  6. Jul 18, 2017 · Featuring a new foreword by Mailer scholar Maggie McKinley. Published nearly twenty years after Norman Mailer’s fiction debut, The Naked and the Dead, this acclaimed novel further solidified the...

    • Norman Mailer
    • Random House Publishing Group, 2017
    • 0399591761, 9780399591761
    • Why Are We in Vietnam?: A Novel
  7. Jul 18, 2017 · Both entertaining and profound, Why Are We in Vietnam? is an exceptional, timeless work awaiting discovery by a new generation of readers. Praise for Why Are We in Vietnam? “A book of great integrity. All the old qualities are here: Mailer’s remarkable feeling for the sensory event, the detail, ‘the way it was,’ his power and energy.”

  8. In Why Are We in Vietnam? Mailer creates a fictional equivalent to siren onslaught and, at the same time, attempts the more difficult task of becoming a writer who is a second Ulysses: Postulate a modern soul marooned in constipation, emptiness, boredom and a dull flat terror of death.