![]() Cairns offered to help Miller establish that reputation, and set about enlisting respected American critics like Edmund Wilson (who had written a favorable review of Cancer) in Miller's cause. Ulysses had been admitted, and Lady Chatterley's Lover would follow. Cairns advised Miller that in order to overcome the ban, he must build a reputation in America as an author of recognized literary merit, such as James Joyce and D.H. Miller then wrote to Cairns expressing his understanding of the predicament that Cairns faced. ![]() Cairns discussed the Miller dilemma with Mencken, who wrote to Miller about Cairns' admiration for the book and the legal reasoning behind its censorship. ![]()
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