Authors: Tracy Daugherty
(1927) tonsillectomy and abandonment in hospital
(1930) first grade
(1937) high school
(1939) messenger job
(1941) graduates from high school, looks for job
(1941) job with insurance company
(1942) laborer job at Norfolk Navy Yard
(1942) enlists in army
(1942) basic training
(1943) commissioned 2nd Lt.
(1943) trained as aviator
(1944) in transit overseas, to North Africa
(1944) arrives at Alesan Air Field, Corsica
(1944) promoted to 1st Lt.
(1944) bombing missions
(1945) shipped home
(1945) back in Coney Island
(1945) trip to Grossinger's
(1945) meets Shirley at Grossinger's
(1945) awaiting discharge in San Angelo, Texas
(1945) woos Shirley and gives her a ring
(1945) officially discharged
(1945) marries Shirley
(1945) goes to California to go to college
(1948) attends NYU
(1949) graduate studies at Columbia University
(1950) Fulbright scholarship, goes to Oxford
(1950) applies to teach at Pennsylvania State College
(1950) teaches at Pennsylvania State College
(1953) looks for job in New York
(1955) advertising and magazine jobs
(1961)
Catch-22
published
(1966) revisits Corsica and war locales
(1967) playwright-in-residence at Yale
(1967) political involvement, stumping for Eugene McCarthy
(1971) professorship at City College
(1974)
Something Happened
published
(1980) affair with a North Carolina lady
(1980) midlife crisis
(1981â82) mysterious illness of (Guillain-Barré syndrome)
(1981) divorce proceedings
(1986) Air Force Academy invitation
(1987) marries Valerie Humphries
(1995) spinal surgery
(1996) Great Book award to
(1997) speech on the Literature of Despair
(1999) cruise to Norway's Arctic region
(1999) death of
(1999) funeral and burial
affairs while married to Shirley
ancestry
appearance
books and stories read in teenage years
books read as child
childhood in Coney Island
childhood summer camps (and the unpacked suitcase)
courage to ride the Coney Island rides
did well in school
dreams recurring to
exercise regime
favorite foods
finances, after illness
first memories
friendships
as grand man of letters
“haunted imagination” of
high school clubs
interviews with
Jewishness of
lasting importance of
learns to smoke
military awards
money worries and preoccupations
musical interest
near-death experiences as child
nervousness of, as child
newspaper route as kid
not a natural flier
political leanings
a precocious reader
psychological testing of, before taking a job
psychotherapy of
reflections and reminiscences
repressed feelings of
sexual yearnings
speech habits
success and failure handled well by
teenage interest in girls
vow never to fly again, after return from combat
war-hero status
wartime experience
Heller, Joseph, family
affection among
appreciation of Shirley
foreign travels
home life
marital strife
photographs with family
relations with Erica and Ted
socializing by
stay in Hollywood
Heller, Joseph, writing career
authors who influenced
fiction-writing courses
first sentences of, as inspiration
JH's ambition and plan
literary awards
playwriting ambition
reaction to negative reviews
studios for writing
theater studies
writing method and rituals
Heller, Joseph, writings
college assignments submitted commercially
early published stories
essays in
Forbes FYI
essays in the underground press
first stories submitted and rejected
first story accepted
included in
Best American Short Stories
screenplays
script rewrites
titles given to
wartime diary keeping
Heller, Lee (Hillel Elias)
abandons idea of college, and goes to work
jobs worked at
reserved personality of
runaway to California
surrogate father to JH
wedding to Perle
Heller, Lena
death of
falls off stool and breaks hip
Sam, brother of
senile decline of
“You've got a twisted brain”
Heller, Paul
Heller, Perle
Heller, Sylvia
job hunting, and secures job at Macy's
Heller, Theodore Michael (Ted)
Funnymen
marriage and daughter of
Slab Rat
Heller, Valerie.
See
Humphries, Valerie
Heller family
confusion over Lee and Sylvia's parentry
move after death of Isaac
poverty of, and living conditions
relatives' visits
“Hello, Genoa, Hello, Genoa” (unfinished)
Hemingway, Ernest
“Cat in the Rain”
“The End of Something”
The Killers
“Soldier's Home”
Henderson's Music Hall, Coney Island
Henry, Buck
Herr, Michael
Herriot, Ãdouard
Hiassen, Carl
High and Low cultures
High Holidays
Hijuelos, Oscar
Hillman Comics
Hills, Rust
Hiroshima
Hispanic-Americans
Hitchens, Christopher
Hitler, Adolf
Hoberman, J.
Hoffman, Dustin
Hoffman, Joseph,
How to Make Love and Like It
Holiday
Holiday, Billie
Holland, Chase, III
Hollywood
Homer
Hook, Sidney
Hornstein, Lillian
Horovitz, Israel (playwright)
Horowitz, Israel (editor)
hot dogs, invention of
Howar, Barbara
Howard, Elizabeth Jane
Howard, Homer B.
Howe, Irving
World of Our Fathers
hucksterism
Hudes, Karen
Hughes, Emmit
Humphrey, Hubert
Humphries, Valerie
life with JH in Easthampton
marries JH
nurse to JH in his hospital stay
romantic involvement with JH
Huneker, James Gibbons
Hunter, Mr. and Mrs.
Hunter Field, Georgia
Hutton, Barbara
Huxley, Aldous
Hynes, Samuel
ice cream
“I Don't Love You Any More”
Ile Rousse, Corsica
Iliad
“I'm cold, I'm cold”
immigrants, assimilation of
The Independent
Insana, Ron
Instrument School and Post Operations arm, Goodfellow Field
intellectuals, New York
International Creative Management
Iraq
Iraq War
Irish-Americans
Isherwood, Christopher
“Is it good for the Jews?”
Israel
Italian-Americans
Italian front
Italian Pavilion
Jackson, Melanie
Jackson, Shirley
Jacquet, Lloyd
Jaeger, Roberta
Jaffe, Herb, and Associates
Jaffe, Irving
Jaffe, Leo
James, Henry
James, William
James Bond movies
Janklow, Mort
Japan
Japanese-Americans
jazz
Jean-Louis (Jack Kerouac)
Jefferson Airplane
Jen, Gish
Jesus
jewelry, purchased by returning vets
Jewish agnosticism
Jewish-American novel
Jewish Daily Forward
Bintel Brief
Jews
in advertising
ambivalence of
American experience of
in history
immigrants from Eastern Europe
of New York
in politics
prejudice against
in publishing
jive talk
Johnson, Lyndon
Johnson, Samuel
John Steinbeck Book Fair
Jonathan Cape
Jones, Gerard,
Men of Tomorrow: Geeks, Gangsters and the Birth of the Comic Book
Jones, Gloria
Jones, James
From Here to Eternity
“A Temper of Steel”
Whistle
Jones, Kaylie,
Lies My Mother Never Told Me
Jordan, John
Journal-American
Joyce, James
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Ulysses
Joyce, Nora
JU-88 medium bombers
Judaism
nonobservance of
Judeo-Christian values
Juglair, Roger
Kafka, Franz
The Trial
Kaganoff, Penny
Kaiser, Irving
Kaiser, Mrs. Irving
Kaiser family
Kaiser's Tailor Shop, Coney Island
Kakutani, Michiko
Kallem, Herby
Kane, Gil
Kaplan, Fred,
1959: The Year Everything Changed
Kaplan, Justin
Kapp, Marty
Karl, Deborah
Karl, Dolores
Karl, Frederick
Katz, Eli
Kaufmann, George S.
Kay, Hershy
Kaye, Danny
Kazin, Alfred
Keach, Stacy
Keaton, Buster
Keaton, Diane
Keats, John
Kehau (waitress)
Kennedy, John F.
Kennedy, Robert
killed
Kennedy, Ted
Kenton, Stan
Kerouac, Jack
“Jazz of the Beat Generation”
On the Road
Kerr, Deborah
Kerr, Walter
Kesey, Ken
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Key West Literary Seminars
Kilroy's restaurant, New York
King, Alan
King, Larry
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
King, Stephen
King David book.
See God Knows
Kinsey Report
Kirwin, Elizabeth
Kissinger, Henry
Kline, Franz
Klopfer, Donald
Knapp, General
Knopf, Alfred A., company
Knowles, John
Knox, Mickey
Korda, Michael
Another Life
Korean War
Kornbluth, S.
Kosinski, Jerzy
Kott, Jan
Kramer, Art
Krassner, Paul
Krause, David
Krementz, Jill
Kristol, Irving
Kroll, Jack
Kroll, Lucy
Ku Klux Klan
Kurtzman, Harvey
Lamb Chop set
Lamm, Miss
Landmarks Preservation Commission
Lapidus, Morris
Lapland,
S.S.
La Reine restaurant
La Spezia
Laughlin, James
Laundry, East Hampton
Laurents, Arthur
Lawrence, D. H.,
Lady Chatterley's Lover
Lazarus, Mell
Lea, Gilbert
Leavis, F. R.
le Carré, John
LeClair, Linda
Lee, Chang-rae
Lee, Harper
To Kill a Mockingbird
Lee, Ngoot
Lee, Stan
the Left
Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher
Leibman, Ron
Leisure Time Group
Lemmon, Jack
Lennon, John
A Spaniard in the Works
shooting of
Leonard, John
LeRoy, Warner
Lester, Elenore
Levenson, Sam
Leventhal, Harold
Levin, Meyer,
Compulsion
Levittown, Long Island
Lewinsky, Monica
Lewis, Jon,
American Film: A History
Lewis, Sinclair
liberal politics
Liberty
Library of Congress
Liebling, A. J.
Life
Lincoln, Abraham
The Lincoln Log
(high school paper)
Lindbergh, Charles
Lindbergh Park, Coney Island
Lindy's restaurant
Lion's Den, New York City
Lipmann, Yom-Tov
literary agents
Little Italy, New York
Lloyd, Harold
Lobster Roll, Montauk
London, Jack
Lone Star Café
Long Island
Long Island University, Southampton Campus
Look
Lorca, Federico GarcÃa
Lori (waitress)
Lorimer, George Horace
Los Angeles
“Lot's Wife”
Lower East Side
Lowry Field, Denver, Colorado
LSD
Luce, Henry
Luce organization
Luciana (girl in Rome)
Lucky Little Bell of San Michele
“Lucky Strike Hit Parade”
Lucy (pet dog)
Luftwaffe
Luna Park, Coney Island
Lustig, Arnold
Lyons, Leonard
Maas, Jane
Macdonald, Dwight
Machiavelli
Macintyre, Ben
MacLeish, Archibald
Macy's department store, Manhattan
Mad
Mademoiselle
Madison Avenue
Mad Men
(TV series)
Magazine Management Company
Magrill's Drugstore, Coney Island
Mahler, Gustav
Mailer, Adele
Mailer, Norman
Barbary Shore
The Deer Park
The Naked and the Dead
“The White Negro: Superficial Reflections on the Hipster”
Major, John Campbell
Malamud, Bernard