The Executioner’s Song

Mailer’s Sad Comedy

Authors

  • Robert Merrill University of Nevada Author

Keywords:

true-crime narrative, tragicomedy, narrative form, documentary fiction, Gary Gilmore, violence, genre theory, Truman Capote, mid-twentieth-century American literature

Abstract

In “The Executioner’s Song: Mailer’s Sad Comedy,” Robert Merrill offers a sustained critical analysis of Norman Mailer’s Pulitzer Prize–winning work, arguing that the book is best understood as a tragicomic exploration of American violence, spectacle, and moral ambiguity. Engaging questions of genre, narrative strategy, and ethical representation, Merrill examines Mailer’s fusion of documentary detail and novelistic form, situating The Executioner’s Song within the tradition of the “true-life novel” while distinguishing it from comparable works by Truman Capote. Through close reading of the book’s structure, characterization of Gary Gilmore, and handling of voice and perspective, the essay contends that Mailer achieves a complex tonal balance in which irony, restraint, and sympathy coexist with skepticism toward American mythologies of freedom, rebellion, and celebrity. Merrill ultimately positions The Executioner’s Song as a decisive turning point in Mailer’s career, marking a maturation of style and moral vision that confronts the limits of narrative authority in representing real violence.

Author Biography

  • Robert Merrill, University of Nevada

    Robert Merrill is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at the University of Nevada at Reno. He is the author of Norman Mailer and Joseph Heller in the Twayne United States Authors series, as well as Critical Essays on Kurt Vonnegut, published in 1990 by G.K. Hall. Merrill received the University’s Foundation Professor Award in 1991, acknowledging his record of excellence as a teacher and scholar.

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Published

2026-01-04

Issue

Section

Classic Interpretations