Language English Dewey Decimal 365/.44/092 B 20 Originally published 1981 OCLC 23020567 ISBN 978-0-679-73237-2 Role Book by Jack Abbott Followed by My return | Publication date 1981 Name In Belly Country United States of America Subject Prison life LC Class HV9468.A22 A37 1991 | |
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Similar My return, The Executioner's Song, Live from Death Row, Conversations with Myself |
In the belly of the beast
In the Belly of the Beast is a book written by Jack Abbott and published in 1981.
Contents
- In the belly of the beast
- In the belly of the beast discussion pt1
- An analysis of the book
- In the media
- References
Jack Abbott was an American prisoner and the book consists of his letters to Norman Mailer about his experiences in what Abbott saw as a brutal and unjust prison system. Mailer supported Abbott's successful bid for parole in 1981, the year that In the Belly of the Beast was published.
The book was very successful, and on July 19, 1981, the New York Times published a praising review of it. However, the day before, Abbott had killed a waiter during a row at a restaurant called Binibon on 2nd Avenue in the East Village. Abbott was eventually arrested, convicted of manslaughter, and returned to prison for the rest of his life until his suicide in 2002.
In 2004, a New York City theatre company ran a play based on the book, named In the Belly of the Beast Revisited.
In the belly of the beast discussion pt.1
An analysis of the book
The book has no organizing principle of chronology, nor is it constructed along conventional tale-telling lines. Instead, it has an Introduction by Mailer, a Foreword, and twelve chapters. Each chapter bears a title that labels the chapter's content; the text consists of excerpts on the subject, extracted from Abbott's letters to Mailer. The chapters do not cleave cleanly into discrete matter; there is a lot of overlap in subject matter. Erroll McDonald, a Random House editor, was the organizer.
In the media
Portions of Belly of the Beast were used in the film Shambondama Elegy' (a.k.a. Tokyo Elegy) by Ian Kerkhof.
The Australian movie Ghosts… of the Civil Dead, directed by John Hillcoat, was largely influenced by In Belly of the Beast. Hillcoat had corresponded with Abbott after his return to incarceration. One of the movie's co-authors, Nick Cave, was also inspired when writing the song "Jack's Shadow".
In Psycho II, the character of Mary Samuels (Meg Tilly) can be seen reading In the Belly of the Beast. The book is later glimpsed, abandoned in the dust outside the Bates Motel, in Psycho III.