Download Buckley and Mailer: The Difficult Friendship That Shaped the Sixties AudioBook Free
Norman Mailer and William F. Buckley, Jr., were towering results who argued publicly about every major problem of the 1960s: the counterculture, Vietnam, feminism, civil protection under the law, the Cold War. Behind the scenes, the two were good friends and respected confidantes who resided astonishingly parallel lives. In Buckley and Mailer, historian Kevin M. Schultz delves to their personal archives to tell the rich account of their friendship, quarrels, and the tumultuous 10 years they did a lot to shape. From other Playboy-sponsored debate prior to the Patterson-Liston heavyweight combat in 1962 with their promotions for mayor of NEW YORK with their confrontations at Truman Capote's Black-and-White Ball, over the March on the Pentagon, and at the 1968 Democratic Country wide Convention, Schultz delivers a brand new chronicle of the '60s and its long aftermath, as well as an entertaining work of narrative record that explores these remarkable results' contrasting visions of America and the future.