Just One Catch (92 page)

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Lowin, Joseph. “The Jewish Art of Joseph Heller.”
Jewish Book Annual
43 (1985–1986): 141–53.

McDonald, James L. “I See Everything Twice: The Structure of Joseph Heller's
Catch-22.

University Review
34 (1968): 175–80.

Mellard, James M. “
Catch-22
: Déjà Vu and the Labyrinth of Memory.”
Bucknell Review
16 (1968): 29–44.

Merrill, Robert. “The Structure and Meaning of
Catch-22.” Studies in American Fiction
14, no. 2 (1986): 139–52.

Merrill, Robert, and John L. Simons. “Snowden's Ghost: The Waking Nightmare of Mike Nichols's
Catch-22.” New Orleans Review
15, no. 2 (1988): 96–104.

Miller, Wayne C. “Ethnic Identity as Moral Focus: A Reading of Joseph Heller's
Good as Gold.

MELUS
6, no. 3 (1979): 3–17.

Monk, Donald. “An Experiment in Therapy: A Study of
Catch-22.” London Review
2 (1967): 12–19.

Moore, Michael. “Pathological Communication Patterns in Heller's ‘Catch-22.'”
ETC: A Review of General Semantics,
December 22, 1995. Posted online at
freelibrary.com
.

Muste, John M. “Better to Die Laughing: The War Novels of Joseph Heller and John Ashmead.”
Critique
5, no. 2 (1962): 16–27.

Nagel, James. “The
Catch-22
Note Cards.”
Studies in the Novel
8 (1976): 394–405.

———. “Joseph Heller and the University.”
College Literature
10, no. 1 (1983): 16–27.

Nelson, Thomas Allen. “Theme and Structure in
Catch-22.” Renascence
23, no. 4 (1971): 173–82.

Nolan, Charles J., Jr. “Heller's Small Debt to Hemingway.”
The Hemingway Review
9, no. 1 (1989): 77–81.

Pinsker, Sanford. “Once More into the Breach: Joseph Heller Gives
Catch-22
a Second Act.”
Topic: A Journal of the Liberal Arts
50 (2000): 28–39.

Pearson, Carol. “
Catch-22
and the Debasement of Language.”
CEA Critic
38, no. 4 (1976): 30–35.

Percy, Walker. “The State of the Novel: Dying Art or New Science?”
Michigan Quarterly Review
16 (1977): 359–73.

Pletcher, Robert. “Overcoming the ‘Catch-22' of Institutional Satire: Joseph Heller's ‘Surrealistic' Characters.”
Studies in Contemporary Satire
15 (1988): 220–27.

Protherough, Robert. “The Sanity of
Catch-22.” Human World
3 (1971): 59–70.

Raeburn, John. “
Catch-22
and the Culture of the 1950s.”
American Studies in Scandinavia
25, no. 2 (1993): 119–28.

Robertson, Joan. “They're After Everyone: Heller's ‘Catch-22' and the Cold War.”
CLIO
19, no. 1 (1989): 41–50.

Ruderman, Judith. “Upside-Down in
Good as Gold:
Moishe Kapoyer as Muse.”
Yiddish
4 (1984): 55–63.

Savu, Laura Elena. “‘This Book of Ours': The Crisis of Authorship and Joseph Heller's
Portrait of an Artist, as an Old Man.

Intertexts
7, no. 1 (2003): 71–89.

Scoggins, Michael C. “Joseph Heller's Combat Experiences in
Catch-22.

War, Literature, and the Arts
15, nos. 1 and 2 (2003): 213–37.

Searles, George J. “
Something Happened
: A New Direction for Joseph Heller.”
Critique
18, no. 3 (1977): 74–82.

Seltzer, Leon F. “Milo's Culpable Innocence: Absurdity as Moral Insanity in
Catch-22.” Papers on Language and Literature
15, no. 3 (1979): 290–310.

Sniderman, Stephen L. “It Was All Yossarian's Fault: Power and Responsibility in
Catch-22.” Twentieth Century Literature
19, no. 4 (1973): 251–58.

Solomon, Eric. “From Christ in Flanders to
Catch-22:
An Approach to War Fiction.”
Texas Studies in Language and Literature
11 (1969): 851–66.

Solomon, Jan. “The Structure of Joseph Heller's
Catch-22.

Critique
9, no. 2 (1967): 46–67.

Stern, Frederick C. “Heller's Hell: Heller's Later Fiction, Jewishness, and the Liberal Imagination.”
MELUS
15, no. 4 (1988): 15–37.

Strehle, Susan. “Slocum's Parenthetical Tic: Style as Metaphor in
Something Happened.

Notes on Contemporary Literature
7, no. 5 (1977): 9–10.

———. “‘A Permanent Game of Excuses': Determinism in Heller's
Something Happened.

Modern Fiction Studies
24, no. 4 (1978–1979): 550–56.

Toman, Marshall. “The Political Satire in Joseph Heller's
Good as Gold.

Studies in Contemporary Satire
17 (1990): 6–14.

———. “
Good as Gold
and Heller's Family Ethic.”
Studies in American Jewish Literature
10, no. 2 (1991): 211–24.

Tucker, Lindsey. “Entropy and Information Theory in Heller's
Something Happened.

Contemporary Literature
(1984): 323–40.

Tyson, Lois. “Joseph Heller's
Something Happened:
The Commodification of Consciousness and the Postmodern Flight from Inwardness.”
CEA Critic
54, no. 2 (1992): 37–51.

Wain, John. “A New Novel about Old Troubles.”
Critical Quarterly
5, no. 2 (1963): 168–173.

Way, Brian. “Formal Experiment and Social Discontent: Joseph Heller's
Catch-22.

Journal of American Studies
2 (1968): 253–70.

 

INDEX

The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

JH stands for Joseph Heller. Books and stories are by JH unless otherwise noted.

1950s

1960s

1970s

340th Bombardment Group

486th Bomb Squadron

487th Bomb Squadron

488th Bomb Squadron

489th Bomb Squadron

loss of planes to Mount Vesuvius

8P 43-27657 (bomber)

8U 43-4064 (bomber)

9/11 terrorist attack

Aaron, Florence

Aaron, Sam

ABC network

Abraham Lincoln high school, Coney Island

Abrams, David

accidents, flying

Actors Studio

Adams, Joey

Adams, Robert M.

Adams, Tim

Adelman, Mary

Adelman, Stanley

advertising

Advertising Age

Afghanistan war

Agee, James

Agnew, Spiro

Air Corps

Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs

Air Medal

Alden, Mary

Aldridge, John W.

Alesan Air Field, Corsica

camp mates that JH met while stationed there

recreation at

strafed by German planes

Alexander, Mike

Aley, Albert

Algeria

Algren, Nelson

The Man with the Golden Arm

Ali, Muhammad

Allen, Fred

Allen, Gracie

Allen, Woody

Allsop, Kenneth

Ally, Carl

Al Roon's health club

Alter, Robert

Altman, Robert,
M*A*S*H

Alvarez, A.

Alvarez, Julia

Amagansett, Long Island

Amazing Stories

Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles

Ambrose, Stephen E.

Amburn, Ellis

America,
S.S.

America in the Sixties
(
Fortune
book)

American culture, opening up of, in 1960s

American Home

Americanization

American Jewish Committee

American Jewish Conference, Interim Committee

American literature, post-World War II

American Nazi party

American Psychiatric Association

American Red Cross Officers Club

Amis, Kingsley

Anderson, Robert

Tea and Sympathy

Anderson, Sherwood

“I Want to Know Why”

Anderson Army Air Field, Walterboro, South Carolina

The Andy Warhol Diaries, Spy
index to

Angel of Death

Anotolini, Bobby

anti-Semitism

antiwar films

antiwar novels

Apollo 11
moon landing

Apprentice
(NYU literary journal)

Apthorp Building, Upper West Side

description and history of

Heller apartment in

Apthorpe, Charles Ward

Arbuckle, Fatty

Arendt, Hannah

Argosy

Argovitz, Jerry and Elaine

Aristophanes

Aristotle

Nicomachean Ethics

Poetics

Arkin, Alan

Arlen, Michael

Armed Forces Editions

Armstrong, Diane

Armstrong, Michael

Army Air Force

Army Air Force and Exchange Service

Arnold, H. H.

Arrick, Larry

Artists and Writers Softball Game

Ascension Island

Astaire, Fred

Astor, William

Athens

Atkinson, Brooks

Atlantic City

The Atlantic Monthly

Auden, W. H.

Aurthur, Robert Alan

All That Jazz
(screenplay)

Austin, Alex

auteur films

aviation

flight training

theory of

Avignon

B-17s

B-24s

B-25s

Babel, Isaac

Bacon, Paul

Bader, Mortimer

Bader, Richard

Balboa Peninsula

Baldwin, James

Balsam, Martin

Bancroft, Anne

Bantam

Baptism of Fire
(recruiting film)

Barasch, Gloria

Barasch, Norman

Barber, Lynn

bar mitzvahs

Barnard College

Barnes, Clive

Barnes, Julian,
Flaubert's Parrot

Barnes & Noble book chain

Barrister's restaurant

Bartells, T. D.

Barth, John

Barthelme, Donald

Basie, William “Count”

Bass, Milton

“bastard,” calling his mother a

Baudin, Maurice “Buck”

Edgar Allan Poe and Others: Representative Short Stories of the Nineteenth Century

Baumel's Specialty Shop, Coney Island

Bausch, Richard

Bay Ridge

Beatles

Beats

Beatty, Jack

Beckett, Samuel

Endgame

Beethoven, Ludwig van

Bellagio Study and Conference Center

Bellow, Saul

The Adventures of Augie March

Herzog

Humboldt's Gift

The Victim

Benadryl

Benchley, Robert

Bendich, Albert

Benny, Jack

Bensonhurst

Benton & Bowles

Berkman, Lou

Berkman, Meredith

Berle, Milton

Berlin Wall

Bernbach, Bill

Bernstein, Carl

Bernstein, Robert L.

Berwick, Donald

Best American Short Stories

bestsellers

Beth Shalom and Sinai Temple, West Los Angeles

Better Publications

Bevins, Tom

Binderman, William

Bishop, Elizabeth

Blackboard Jungle
(film)

blackface

Blackwater company

Blank, Diane

Bloomstein, Henry

Bloustein, Edward

Bluhdorn, Charles

Bodenheim, Maxwell

Böll, Heinrich

Bologna

bombardier

role of

training to be

bomber crews, low morale of

bombers, vulnerability to flak

bombing missions

JH's participation in

number (60) flown by JH

number to constitute a tour duty, raised

survival odds of

Bookhampton store

“Bookies, Beware!”

book jacket design

The Book of Knowledge

Book-of-the-Month Club

books, celebrity

Borough Park

Borscht Belt

Boston

Boston Globe

Bourne, Nina

Bowles, Jane

Bowles, Paul

Boy Scouts

Brackman, Jacob

Brandeis University Libraries

Braudy, Susan

Brenner Pass

Bridgehampton, Long Island, N.Y.

British Petroleum

Brodax, Al

Up Periscope Yellow

Brokaw, Tom

Brooklyn College

Brooks, Mel

“The 2,000-Year-Old Man”

Brooks, Richard

Brown, Francis

Brown, Helen Gurley

Sex and the Single Girl

Brown, Phil

Brown, Tina

Browning, Robert, “Last Duchess”

Brownsville, Brooklyn

Broyard, Anatole

Kafka Was the Rage

Bruccoli, Matthew J.

Bruce, Lenny

Brustein, Robert

BT-13s (Valiants)

Buchenwald

Buchwald, Art

Bucine

Buck, Tom

Buckley, Christopher

“Catch-2009,” 523n470

Buckley, William F.

Bundy, McGeorge

Burgess, Anthony

Burgos, Carl

Burnett, Whit

Burns, George

Burns, John Horne

The Gallery

Busch, Frederick

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