Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery

by Norman Mailer

Book, 1995

Collection

Publication

Random House (1995), Edition: 1st, 791 pages

Description

Reconstructs the life of Lee Harvey Oswald including the Minsk years, childhood, time in the Marine Corps and the events from 1961-1963.

Media reviews

Sunday London Times
To our initial surprises, Mailer rejects conspiracy. According to Oliver Stone’s feverish movie, JFK, the assassination involved practically 50 per cent of the American populace. The unlikelihood of a pan-national cover-up would seem to outweigh the more local lacunae – Oswald’s marksmanship,
Show More
the ‘magic bullet’, Jack Ruby – which are merely ‘evidentiary’, and subject to the ping-pong of rival advocacies. More crucially, all conspiracies founder on the crags of Oswald’s character, as here established. No concerted effort, however harebrained, could have placed Oswald at its leading edge. Even as a patsy he was unemployable... Mailer has written some pretty crazy books in his time, but this isn’t one of them. Like its predecessor, Harlot’s Ghost, it is the performance of an author relishing the force and reach of his own acuity.
Show Less

User reviews

LibraryThing member simonson
Forget Crossfire and read this instead!
LibraryThing member arubabookwoman
In [11/22/63] [[Stephen King]] cites Mailer's Oswald's Tale as a source, and since that book has been on my shelf for many, many years, I picked it up next.

Mailer's study is extremely well-documented--sources range from all the testimony before the Warren Commission to interviews with the Oswalds'
Show More
neighbors in Russia, as well as interviews with Marina and her family. The book is not considered true nonfiction, however, because there's a fair amount of supposition and projection. What is incontrovertible, and what particularly struck me, was how erractic Oswald's actions were through-out his life.

I could see how greatly King's book drew from Mailer's book. To that extent, having just read the King book, I felt I was reading some of the same things over again. Mailer concludes, as does King that Oswald acted alone. I'm not convinced though.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Oreillynsf
An strong narrative of the life and obsessions of Lee Harvey Oswald. Like many people I find something screwy about the whole Kennedy Assassination and associated investigations. But Mailer makes a strong case for a long gunman, and a terribly troubled (crazy) one at that. That being said, you
Show More
needn't be a believer int eh lone gunman theory to find Oswald's bizarre life interesting.
Show Less
LibraryThing member rsummer
Very well researched and written account of Oswald's life, such as it was. A must read for anyone interested in Kennedy's assasination. Some questions about this whole episode will never be known.
LibraryThing member dickmanikowski
This was unlike anything I've ever read. Half a dozen times I nearly abandoned it. It's tedious, plodding, dreary, and I knew from the start how the story would end.
But it was also fascinating. Mailer attempts to dig into the mind of the man who most of the world is still convinced killed the 35th
Show More
President of the United States. I was a high school freshman at the time, and I still have vivid memories how the world seemed to stop in its tracks.
Mailer's research for the book was very extensive. Besides heavy reliance on the findings of the Warren Commission, Mailer's associates conducted personal interviews with dozens of persons still alive in the late 1980's who knew Oswald. They even tracked down individuals who knew him during his expatriate years in Russia.
The resulting portrait is oddly gripping.
But the book is a log slog.
Show Less
LibraryThing member AliceAnna
A really good book. I've never really read any of the conspiracy stuff, but this book gave me a good anti-paranoid basis on Oswald's involvement. Nobody knows what happened, of course, but whatever his role, Oswald was no innocent. He loved to play games, to play one person or group against
Show More
another. He also had a highly inflated sense of self -- he knew he would make his mark on history and wasn't going to give up until he did so.
Show Less
LibraryThing member roblong
Long, rambling biography of Lee Harvey Oswald, divided half into his time in Russia, and half in America in the runup to the JFK assassination. The Russian material is more interesting, in the American section Mailer seems less sharp, except for in New Orleans, when Oswald's involvement with the
Show More
local gay community raises the potential for intrigue. I think his project ran out of steam a bit: he wanted (and admits as much) to uncover a conspiracy but in the end comes to the conclusion there isn't one there. A great turn of phrase when he puts his mind to it, though.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bnbookgirl
#unreadshelfproject2019 There were many parts of this tome that I had to skim over. There were so many Russian characters in the first part, I found myself overwhelmed and I really didn't care. The second half of the book is much more interesting. The New Orleans and Texas parts really held my
Show More
attention. This book is really well written and researched. If you are looking for a super, in depth, looooooonnnnngggg book about Oswald, by all means, this is it. Many other books on Oswald are referenced in this one that may be more concise but still informative.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ProfH
The mystery surrounding the JFK assassination made this a must-read for me. It feels like largely the same technique that Mailer used for The Executor's Song. Yet the subject is far more elusive despite the author and the research team's best efforts. It is still a very interesting personality and
Show More
character study of Oswald (particularly concerning the Minsk years), but with so few facts and so much misinformation, very little is ultimately established. At nearly nine-hundred pages, Oswald's Tale is probably only good value to those interested in the event or those that want more of the author's distinctive style.
Show Less

Original language

English

Original publication date

1995

Physical description

791 p.; 6.75 x 2 inches

ISBN

9780679425359
Page: 0.0977 seconds