Castle Mailer

Authors

  • Robert J. Begiebing Southern New Hampshire University Author

Keywords:

book review, fascism, evil, metaphysical fiction, Adolf Hitler, power and authority, late Mailer

Abstract

Robert J. Begiebing offers an extended critical analysis of Norman Mailer’s The Castle in the Forest, situating the novel within Mailer’s long-standing engagement with metaphysical, historical, and psychological explanations of evil. Begiebing examines Mailer’s audacious narrative strategy, particularly the use of a demonic first-person narrator, to explore the origins of Adolf Hitler and the broader cultural conditions that enable fascism. The review assesses Mailer’s blending of extensive historical research with speculative metaphysics, tracing recurring concerns across his oeuvre, including free will, authoritarianism, and the tension between rational and archetypal modes of understanding. While attentive to the novel’s digressive structure and demands on the reader, Begiebing ultimately frames The Castle in the Forest as a late-career work of remarkable ambition, extending Mailer’s lifelong interrogation of power, evil, and the psychological foundations of political extremism.

Author Biography

  • Robert J. Begiebing, Southern New Hampshire University

    Robert J. Begiebing, author of over twenty articles and six books, directs the Low-Residency MFA at Southern NH University, where he has won three awards for excellence in teaching. His books include two on Norman Mailer and a trilogy of novels. His novel Rebecca Wentworth’s Distraction won the Langum Prize for historical fiction in 2003. His fiction writing has been supported by grants from the Lila Wallace Foundation and the New Hampshire Council for the Arts.

Published

2026-01-25

Issue

Section

Review Essays