Frank, Mike. “Eros and Thanatos in Catch-22.” Canadian Review of American Studies 7 (1976): 77–87.
Friedman, John, and Judith Ruderman. “Joseph Heller and the ‘Real’ King David.” Judaism 36, no. 3 (1987): 296–301.
Furlani, Andre. “‘Brisk Socratic Dialogues’: Elenctic Rhetoric in Joseph Heller’s Something Happened.” Narrative 3, no. 3 (1995): 252–70.
Galloway, David. “Clown and Saint: The Hero in Current American Fiction.” Critique 7, no. 3 (1965): 46–65.
Gaukroger, Doug. “Time Structure in Catch-22.” Studies in Modern Fiction 12, no. 2 (1970): 70–85.
Granger, Jamie. “Love During Wartime: Adam and Eve in Catch-22.” Pleiades 14, no. 2 (1994): 79–85.
Green, Daniel. “A World Worth Laughing At: Catch-22 and the Humor of Black Humor.” Studies in the Novel 27, no. 2 (1995): 186–96.
Greenfield, Josh. “22 Was Funnier Than 14.” New York Times Book Review, March 3, 1968, 1, 49–51, 53.
Henry, G. B. McK. “Significant Corn: Catch-22.” Melbourne Critical Review 9 (1966): 133–44.
Hewes, Henry. “A Game for Our Sons.” The Saturday Review, November 2, 1968, 53.
Hidalgo-Dowling, Laura. “Negation as a Stylistic Feature in Catch-22: A Corpus Study.” Style 37, no. 3 (2003): 318–41.
Kazin, Alfred. “The War Novel from Mailer to Vonnegut.” The Saturday Review, February 6, 1971, 13–15, 36.
Kennard, Jean E. “Joseph Heller: At War with Absurdity.” Mosaic 4, no. 3 (1971): 75–87.
Klemptner, Susan S. “A Permanent Game of Excuses: Determinism in Heller’s Something Happened.” Modern Fiction Studies 24 (1978–1979): 550–56.
LeClair, Thomas. “Death and Black Humor.” Critique 17, no. 1 (1975): 5–40.
———. “Joseph Heller, Something Happened, and the Art of Excess.” Studies in American Fiction 9, no. 2 (1981): 245–60.
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
Bush, George H. W.
business lunches
business novel
Byrne, Mrs. William
cabaret perf
ormers
Cactus Hotel, San Angelo, Texas
Caesar, Sid
Cage, John
Cahan, Abraham
The Rise of David Levinsky
Cairo
California
Callahan, Bill
Calley, John
Camp Upton, Long Island
Canio’s store
Cantor, Eddie
Capote, Truman
Other Voices, Other Rooms
Capri
Caputo, Philip
Caro, Bob
Caruso, Enrico
Casino Royale
Casson, Lionel
“Castle of Snow”
“Catch-18” (early manuscript of Catch-22)
“Catch 18” (published story)
Catch-22 (film)
reviews of
Catch-22 (novel)
censorship threatened
conception and writing of
critical assessments of
early submissions
editing and revisions
film rights
Hebrew translation of
jacket design for
JH’s own view of
legal concerns
popular success of
prepub copies
promotion and advertising
publication and sales
reviews
sequel to (Closing Time, q.v.)
title changed, pre-publication
twenty-fifth anniversary celebrations
catch-22 (term)
Catch-22 (stage adaptation)
Catch-22: A Dramatization
Cather, Willa
Catskills
Cave of the Winds
Cedar Lawn Cemetery, East Hampton
Céline, Louis-Ferdinand
Journey to the End of the Night
Center for the Book
Central Filing bar, New York
Cerf, Bennett
Cervione, Corsica
Chambers, Whittaker
Chancellor, John
Chandler, Raymond
The Big Sleep
Chapman, Willis F.
Chappaquiddick incident
Chatham, Russell
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheever, John
Cheltenham Festival for the Book
Chestney, Audrey
Chinatown, New York
Chrenko, Joe
Christianity
Churchill, Winston
Cimino, Michael, Heaven’s Gate
City College
civilian casualties
Claiborne, Craig
Clancy, Tom
Clark, Mary Higgins
Clay, Cassius
Clemons, Walter
Clevinger’s Trial
Clinton, Bill
Closing Time (novel)
advance on
conception and writing of
editing of
publication and sales
reviews
Club Alteo
Club Hilight
Coconut Grove nightclub, Los Angeles
Cohen, Jeffrey
Cohen, Richard
Cohen, Stanley
Cohen on the Telephone (comedy record)
Just One Catch Page 67