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J. D. Salinger

Jerome David Salinger (/ˈsælɪnər/; January 1, 1919 – January 27, 2010) was an American author best known for his 1951 novel The Catcher in the Rye. Salinger got his start in 1940, before serving in World War II, by publishing several short stories in Story magazine.[1] In 1948, his critically acclaimed story "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" appeared in The New Yorker, which published much of his later work.[2][3]

J. D. Salinger
Salinger in 1950
BornJerome David Salinger
(1919-01-01)January 1, 1919
New York City, U.S.
DiedJanuary 27, 2010(2010-01-27) (aged 91)
Cornish, New Hampshire, U.S.
OccupationAuthor, writer
Education
Notable works
Spouse
  • Sylvia Welter
    (m. 1945; div. 1947)
  • Claire Douglas
    (m. 1955; div. 1967)
  • Colleen O'Neill
    (m. 1988)
Children2, including Matt
Signature

The Catcher in the Rye (1951) was an immediate popular success; Salinger's depiction of adolescent alienation and loss of innocence was influential, especially among adolescent readers.[4] The novel was widely read and controversial,[a] and its success led to public attention and scrutiny. Salinger became reclusive, publishing less frequently. He followed Catcher with a short story collection, Nine Stories (1953); Franny and Zooey (1961), a volume containing a novella and a short story; and a volume containing two novellas, Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction (1963). Salinger's last published work, the novella Hapworth 16, 1924, appeared in The New Yorker on June 19, 1965.

Afterward, Salinger struggled with unwanted attention, including a legal battle in the 1980s with biographer Ian Hamilton and the release in the late 1990s of memoirs written by two people close to him: Joyce Maynard, an ex-lover; and his daughter Margaret Salinger.

Early life

 
Where Salinger grew up, 1133 Park Avenue in Manhattan

Jerome David Salinger was born in Manhattan, New York, on January 1, 1919.[5] His father, Sol Salinger, traded in Kosher cheese, and was from a family of Lithuanian-Jewish descent,[6] Sol's father having been the rabbi for Adath Jeshurun Congregation in Louisville, Kentucky.[7]

Salinger's mother, Marie (née Jillich), was born in Atlantic, Iowa, of German, Irish, and Scottish descent,[8][9][10] "but changed her first name to Miriam to appease her in-laws"[11] and considered herself Jewish after marrying Salinger's father.[12] Salinger did not learn that his mother was not of Jewish ancestry until just after he celebrated his Bar Mitzvah.[13] He had one sibling, an older sister, Doris (1912–2001).[14]

In his youth, Salinger attended public schools on the West Side of Manhattan. In 1932, the family moved to Park Avenue, and Salinger enrolled at the McBurney School, a nearby private school.[10] Salinger had trouble fitting in there and took measures to conform, such as calling himself Jerry.[15] His family called him Sonny.[16] At McBurney, he managed the fencing team, wrote for the school newspaper and appeared in plays.[10] He "showed an innate talent for drama," though his father opposed the idea of his becoming an actor.[17] His parents then enrolled him at Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pennsylvania.[10] Salinger began writing stories "under the covers [at night], with the aid of a flashlight".[18] He was the literary editor of the class yearbook, Crossed Sabres, and participated in the glee club, aviation club, French club, and the Non-Commissioned Officers Club.[15]

Salinger's Valley Forge 201 file says he was a "mediocre" student, and his recorded IQ between 111 and 115 was slightly above average.[19][20] He graduated in 1936. Salinger started his freshman year at New York University in 1936. He considered studying special education[21] but dropped out the following spring. That fall, his father urged him to learn about the meat-importing business, and he went to work at a company in Vienna and Bydgoszcz, Poland.[22] Surprisingly, Salinger went willingly, but he was so disgusted by the slaughterhouses that he firmly decided to embark on a different career. His disgust for the meat business and rejection of his father likely influenced his vegetarianism as an adult.[23] He left Austria one month before it was annexed by Nazi Germany on March 12, 1938.[citation needed]

In the fall of 1938, Salinger attended Ursinus College in Collegeville, Pennsylvania, and wrote a column called "skipped diploma," which included movie reviews.[24] He dropped out after one semester.[10][16] In 1939, Salinger attended the Columbia University School of General Studies in Manhattan, where he took a writing class taught by Whit Burnett, longtime editor of Story magazine. According to Burnett, Salinger did not distinguish himself until a few weeks before the end of the second semester, at which point "he suddenly came to life" and completed three stories.[25] Burnett told Salinger that his stories were skillful and accomplished, accepting "The Young Folks," a vignette about several aimless youths, for publication in Story.[25] Salinger's debut short story was published in the magazine's March–April 1940 issue. Burnett became Salinger's mentor, and they corresponded for several years.[15][26]

World War II

In 1942, Salinger started dating Oona O'Neill, daughter of the playwright Eugene O'Neill. Despite finding her immeasurably self-absorbed (he confided to a friend that "Little Oona's hopelessly in love with little Oona"), he called her often and wrote her long letters.[27] Their relationship ended when Oona began seeing Charlie Chaplin, whom she eventually married.[28] In late 1941, Salinger briefly worked on a Caribbean cruise ship, serving as an activity director and possibly a performer.[29]

The same year, Salinger began submitting short stories to The New Yorker. The magazine rejected seven of his stories that year, including "Lunch for Three," "Monologue for a Watery Highball," and "I Went to School with Adolf Hitler." But in December 1941, it accepted "Slight Rebellion off Madison," a Manhattan-set story about a disaffected teenager named Holden Caulfield with "pre-war jitters".[30] When Japan carried out the attack on Pearl Harbor that month, the story was rendered "unpublishable." Salinger was devastated. The story appeared in The New Yorker in 1946.[30] In the spring of 1942, several months after the U.S. entered World War II, Salinger was drafted into the army, where he saw combat with the 12th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Division.[29] He was present at Utah Beach on D-Day, in the Battle of the Bulge, and the Battle of Hürtgen Forest.[31][15]

During the campaign from Normandy into Germany, Salinger arranged to meet with Ernest Hemingway, a writer who had influenced him and was then working as a war correspondent in Paris.[32] Salinger was impressed with Hemingway's friendliness and modesty, finding him more "soft" than his gruff public persona.[33] Hemingway was impressed by Salinger's writing and remarked: "Jesus, he has a helluva talent."[4] The two began corresponding; Salinger wrote to Hemingway in July 1946 that their talks were among his few positive memories of the war,[33] and added that he was working on a play about Caulfield and hoped to play the part himself.[33]

Salinger was assigned to a counter-intelligence unit also known as the Ritchie Boys, in which he used his proficiency in French and German to interrogate prisoners of war.[34] In April 1945 he entered Kaufering IV concentration camp, a subcamp of Dachau. Salinger earned the rank of Staff Sergeant[35] and served in five campaigns.[36] His war experiences affected him emotionally. He was hospitalized for a few weeks for combat stress reaction after Germany was defeated,[37][38] and later told his daughter: "You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely, no matter how long you live."[34] Both his biographers speculate that Salinger drew upon his wartime experiences in several stories,[39] such as "For Esmé—with Love and Squalor", which is narrated by a traumatized soldier. Salinger continued to write while serving in the army, publishing several stories in slick magazines such as Collier's and The Saturday Evening Post. He also continued to submit stories to The New Yorker, but with little success; it rejected all of his submissions from 1944 to 1946, including a group of 15 poems in 1945.[30]

Postwar years

After Germany's defeat, Salinger signed up for a six-month period of "Denazification" duty in Germany[40] for the Counterintelligence Corps. He lived in Weißenburg and, soon after, married Sylvia Welter. He brought her to the United States in April 1946, but the marriage fell apart after eight months and Sylvia returned to Germany.[41] In 1972, Salinger's daughter Margaret was with him when he received a letter from Sylvia. He looked at the envelope, and, without reading it, tore it apart. It was the first time he had heard from her since the breakup, but as Margaret put it, "when he was finished with a person, he was through with them."[42]

In 1946, Whit Burnett agreed to help Salinger publish a collection of his short stories through Story Press's Lippincott Imprint.[43] The collection, The Young Folks, was to consist of 20 stories—ten, like the title story and "Slight Rebellion off Madison", already in print and ten previously unpublished.[43] Though Burnett implied the book would be published and even negotiated Salinger a $1,000 advance, Lippincott overruled Burnett and rejected the book.[43] Salinger blamed Burnett for the book's failure to see print, and the two became estranged.[44]

By the late 1940s, Salinger had become an avid follower of Zen Buddhism, to the point that he "gave reading lists on the subject to his dates"[4] and arranged a meeting with Buddhist scholar D. T. Suzuki.[citation needed]

In 1947, Salinger submitted a short story, "The Bananafish", to The New Yorker. William Maxwell, the magazine's fiction editor, was impressed enough with "the singular quality of the story" that the magazine asked Salinger to continue revising it. He spent a year reworking it with New Yorker editors and the magazine published it, now titled "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", in the January 31, 1948, issue. The magazine thereon offered Salinger a "first-look" contract that allowed it right of first refusal on any future stories.[45] The critical acclaim accorded "Bananafish" coupled with problems Salinger had with stories being altered by the "slicks" led him to publish almost exclusively in The New Yorker.[46] "Bananafish" was also the first of Salinger's published stories to feature the Glasses, a fictional family consisting of two retired vaudeville performers and their seven precocious children: Seymour, Buddy, Boo Boo, Walt, Waker, Zooey, and Franny.[47] Salinger published seven stories about the Glasses, developing a detailed family history and focusing particularly on Seymour, the brilliant but troubled eldest child.[47]

In the early 1940s, Salinger confided in a letter to Burnett that he was eager to sell the film rights to some of his stories to achieve financial security.[48] According to Ian Hamilton, Salinger was disappointed when "rumblings from Hollywood" over his 1943 short story "The Varioni Brothers" came to nothing. Therefore, he immediately agreed when, in mid-1948, independent film producer Samuel Goldwyn offered to buy the film rights to his short story "Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut."[48] Though Salinger sold the story with the hope—in the words of his agent Dorothy Olding—that it "would make a good movie",[49] critics lambasted the film upon its release in 1949.[50] Renamed My Foolish Heart and starring Dana Andrews and Susan Hayward, the film departed to such an extent from Salinger's story that Goldwyn biographer A. Scott Berg called it a "bastardization."[50] As a result of this experience, Salinger never again permitted film adaptations of his work.[51] When Brigitte Bardot wanted to buy the rights to "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", Salinger refused but told his friend Lillian Ross, longtime staff writer for The New Yorker, "She's a cute, talented, lost enfante, and I'm tempted to accommodate her, pour le sport."[52]

The Catcher in the Rye

 
Cover and spine of The Catcher in the Rye, first edition

In the 1940s, Salinger confided to several people that he was working on a novel featuring Holden Caulfield, the teenage protagonist of his short story "Slight Rebellion off Madison",[53] and Little, Brown and Company published The Catcher in the Rye on July 16, 1951.[54] The novel's plot is straightforward,[55] detailing 16-year-old Holden's experiences in New York City after his fourth expulsion and departure from an elite college preparatory school.[56] The book is more notable for the persona and testimonial voice of its first-person narrator, Holden.[57] He serves as an insightful but unreliable narrator who expounds on the importance of loyalty, the "phoniness" of adulthood, and his own duplicity.[57] In a 1953 interview with a high school newspaper, Salinger admitted that the novel was "sort of" autobiographical, explaining, "My boyhood was very much the same as that of the boy in the book, and it was a great relief telling people about it."[58]

Initial reactions to the book were mixed, ranging from The New York Times hailing Catcher as "an unusually brilliant first novel"[59] to denigrations of the book's monotonous language and Holden's "immorality and perversion"[60] (he uses religious slurs and freely discusses casual sex and prostitution).[61] The novel was a popular success; within two months of its publication, it had been reprinted eight times. It spent 30 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller list.[55] The book's initial success was followed by a brief lull in popularity, but by the late 1950s, according to his biographer Ian Hamilton, it had "become the book all brooding adolescents had to buy, the indispensable manual from which cool styles of disaffectation could be borrowed."[62] It has been compared to Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.[63] Newspapers began publishing articles about the "Catcher Cult,"[62] and the novel was banned in several countries—as well as some U.S. schools—because of its subject matter and what Catholic World reviewer Riley Hughes called an "excessive use of amateur swearing and coarse language".[64] According to one angry parent's tabulation, 237 instances of "goddamn," 58 uses of "bastard," 31 "Chrissakes," and one incident of flatulence constituted what was wrong with Salinger's book.[64]

In the 1970s, several U.S. high school teachers who assigned the book were fired or forced to resign. A 1979 study of censorship noted that The Catcher in the Rye "had the dubious distinction of being at once the most frequently censored book across the nation and the second-most frequently taught novel in public high schools" (after John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men).[65][66] The book remains widely read; as of 2004, it was selling about 250,000 copies per year, "with total worldwide sales over 10 million copies".[67]

Mark David Chapman, who shot singer-songwriter John Lennon in December 1980, was obsessed with the book. His main motive was his frustration with Lennon's lifestyle and public statements, as well as delusions he suffered related to Holden Caulfield.[68][69]

In the wake of its 1950s success, Salinger received (and rejected) numerous offers to adapt The Catcher in the Rye for the screen, including one from Samuel Goldwyn.[50] Since its publication, there has been sustained interest in the novel among filmmakers, with Billy Wilder,[70] Harvey Weinstein, and Steven Spielberg[71] among those seeking to secure the rights. In the 1970s Salinger said, "Jerry Lewis tried for years to get his hands on the part of Holden."[72] Salinger repeatedly refused, and in 1999 his ex-lover Joyce Maynard concluded, "The only person who might ever have played Holden Caulfield would have been J. D. Salinger."[72]

Writing in the 1950s and move to Cornish

In a July 1951 profile in Book of the Month Club News, Salinger's friend and New Yorker editor William Maxwell asked Salinger about his literary influences. He replied, "A writer, when he's asked to discuss his craft, ought to get up and call out in a loud voice just the names of the writers he loves. I love Kafka, Flaubert, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, Proust, O'Casey, Rilke, Lorca, Keats, Rimbaud, Burns, E. Brontë, Jane Austen, Henry James, Blake, Coleridge. I won't name any living writers. I don't think it's right" (although O'Casey was in fact alive at the time).[73] In letters from the 1940s, Salinger expressed his admiration of three living, or recently deceased, writers: Sherwood Anderson, Ring Lardner, and F. Scott Fitzgerald;[74] Ian Hamilton wrote that Salinger even saw himself for some time as "Fitzgerald's successor".[75] Salinger's "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" has an ending similar to that of Fitzgerald's story "May Day."[76]

Salinger wrote friends of a momentous change in his life in 1952, after several years of practicing Zen Buddhism, while reading The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna about Hindu religious teacher Sri Ramakrishna.[77] He became an adherent of Ramakrishna's Advaita Vedanta Hinduism, which advocated celibacy for those seeking enlightenment, and detachment from human responsibilities such as family.[78][79] Salinger's religious studies were reflected in some of his writing. The story "Teddy" features a ten-year-old child who expresses Vedantic insights.[80] He also studied the writings of Ramakrishna's disciple Vivekananda; in "Hapworth 16, 1924", Seymour Glass calls him "one of the most exciting, original and best-equipped giants of this century."[78]

In 1953, Salinger published a collection of seven stories from The New Yorker (including "Bananafish"), as well as two the magazine had rejected. The collection was published as Nine Stories in the United States, and "For Esmé—with Love and Squalor" in the UK, after one of Salinger's best-known stories.[81] The book received grudgingly positive reviews, and was a financial success—"remarkably so for a volume of short stories," according to Hamilton.[82] Nine Stories spent three months on the New York Times Bestseller list.[82] Already tightening his grip on publicity, Salinger refused to allow publishers of the collection to depict his characters in dust jacket illustrations, lest readers form preconceived notions of them.[citation needed]

As The Catcher in the Rye's notability grew, Salinger gradually withdrew from public view. In 1953, he moved from an apartment at 300 East 57th Street,[83] New York, to Cornish, New Hampshire. Early in his time at Cornish he was relatively sociable, particularly with students at Windsor High School. Salinger invited them to his house frequently to play records and talk about problems at school.[84] One such student, Shirley Blaney, persuaded Salinger to be interviewed for the high school page of The Daily Eagle, the city paper. After the interview appeared prominently in the newspaper's editorial section, Salinger cut off all contact with the high schoolers without explanation.[84] He was also seen less frequently around town, meeting only one close friend—jurist Learned Hand—with any regularity.[85] He also began to publish less often. After Nine Stories, he published only four stories in the rest of the decade, two in 1955 and one each in 1957 and 1959.[citation needed]

Second marriage, family, and spiritual beliefs

In February 1955, at age 36, Salinger married Claire Douglas (b. 1933), a Radcliffe student who was art critic Robert Langton Douglas's daughter. They had two children, Margaret Salinger (also known as Peggy – born December 10, 1955) and Matthew "Matt" Salinger (born February 13, 1960). Margaret Salinger wrote in her memoir Dream Catcher that she believes her parents would not have married, nor would she have been born, had her father not read the teachings of Lahiri Mahasaya, a guru of Paramahansa Yogananda, which brought the possibility of enlightenment to those following the path of the "householder" (a married person with children).[86] After their marriage, Salinger and Claire were initiated into the path of Kriya yoga in a small store-front Hindu temple in Washington, D.C., during the summer of 1955.[87] They received a mantra and breathing exercise to practice for ten minutes twice a day.[87]

Salinger also insisted that Claire drop out of school and live with him, only four months shy of graduation, which she did. Certain elements of the story "Franny," published in January 1955, are based on his relationship with Claire, including her ownership of the book The Way of the Pilgrim.[88] Because of their isolated location in Cornish and Salinger's proclivities, they hardly saw other people for long stretches of time. Claire was also frustrated by Salinger's ever-changing religious beliefs. Though she committed herself to Kriya yoga, Salinger chronically left Cornish to work on a story "for several weeks only to return with the piece he was supposed to be finishing all undone or destroyed and some new 'ism' we had to follow."[89] Claire believed "it was to cover the fact that Jerry had just destroyed or junked or couldn't face the quality of, or couldn't face publishing, what he had created."[89]

After abandoning Kriya yoga, Salinger tried Dianetics (the forerunner of Scientology), even meeting its founder L. Ron Hubbard, but according to Claire was quickly disenchanted with it.[89][90] This was followed by an adherence to a number of spiritual, medical, and nutritional belief systems, including Christian Science, Edgar Cayce, homeopathy, acupuncture, and macrobiotics.[91]

Salinger's family life was further marked by discord after his first child was born; according to Margaret's book, Claire felt that her daughter had replaced her in Salinger's affections.[92] The infant Margaret was sick much of the time, but Salinger, having embraced Christian Science, refused to take her to a doctor.[93] According to Margaret, her mother admitted to her years later that she went "over the edge" in the winter of 1957 and had made plans to murder her and then commit suicide. Claire had supposedly intended to do it during a trip to New York City with Salinger, but she instead acted on a sudden impulse to take Margaret from the hotel and run away. After a few months, Salinger persuaded her to return to Cornish.[93]

The Salingers divorced in 1967, with Claire getting custody of the children.[94] Salinger remained close to his family.[95] He built a new house for himself across the road and visited frequently.[95]

Nancy Clark Reynolds had been a love interest of Salinger.[96]

Last publications and Maynard relationship

 
Salinger on the cover of Time (September 15, 1961)

Salinger published Franny and Zooey in 1961, and Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction in 1963. Each book contained two short stories or novellas published in The New Yorker between 1955 and 1959, and were the only stories Salinger had published since Nine Stories. On the dust jacket of Franny and Zooey, Salinger wrote, in reference to his interest in privacy: "It is my rather subversive opinion that a writer's feelings of anonymity-obscurity are the second most valuable property on loan to him during his working years."[97]

On September 15, 1961, Time magazine devoted its cover to Salinger. In an article that profiled his "life of recluse", the magazine reported that the Glass family series "is nowhere near completion ... Salinger intends to write a Glass trilogy."[4] But Salinger published only one other thing after that: "Hapworth 16, 1924", a novella in the form of a long letter by seven-year-old Seymour Glass to his parents from summer camp. His first new work in six years, the novella took up most of the June 19, 1965, issue of The New Yorker, and was universally panned by critics. Around this time, Salinger had isolated Claire from friends and relatives and made her—in Margaret Salinger's words—"a virtual prisoner."[89] Claire separated from him in September 1966; their divorce was finalized on October 3, 1967.[98]

In 1972, at age 53, Salinger had a relationship with 18-year-old Joyce Maynard that lasted for nine months. Maynard was already an experienced writer for Seventeen magazine. The New York Times had asked her to write an article that, when published as "An Eighteen-Year-Old Looks Back On Life" on April 23, 1972,[99] made her a celebrity. Salinger wrote her a letter warning about living with fame. After exchanging 25 letters, Maynard moved in with Salinger the summer after her freshman year at Yale University.[100] Maynard did not return to Yale that fall, and spent ten months as a guest in Salinger's house. The relationship ended, he told Margaret at a family outing, because Maynard wanted children, and he felt he was too old.[101] In her autobiography, Maynard paints a different picture, saying Salinger abruptly ended the relationship, sent her away and refused to take her back. She had dropped out of Yale to be with him, even forgoing a scholarship. Maynard came to find out that Salinger had begun several relationships with young women by exchanging letters. One of them was his last wife, a nurse who was already engaged to be married to someone else when she met him.[102] In a 2021 Vanity Fair article, Maynard wrote,

I was groomed to be the sexual partner of a narcissist who nearly derailed my life [...] [in] the years that followed, I heard from well over a dozen women who had a similar set of treasured letters from Salinger in their possession, written to them when they were teenagers. It appeared that in the case of one girl, Salinger was writing letters to her while I sat in the next room, believing he was my soul mate and partner for life.[103]

While he was living with Maynard, Salinger continued to write in a disciplined fashion, a few hours every morning. According to Maynard, by 1972 he had completed two new novels.[104][105] In a 1974 interview with The New York Times, he said, "There is a marvelous peace in not publishing ... I like to write. I love to write. But I write just for myself and my own pleasure."[106] According to Maynard, he saw publication as "a damned interruption".[107] In her memoir, Margaret Salinger describes the detailed filing system her father had for his unpublished manuscripts: "A red mark meant, if I die before I finish my work, publish this 'as is,' blue meant publish but edit first, and so on."[108] A neighbor said that Salinger told him that he had written 15 unpublished novels.[109]

Salinger's final interview was in June 1980 with Betty Eppes of The Baton Rouge Advocate, which has been represented somewhat differently, depending on the secondary source. By one account, Eppes was an attractive young woman who misrepresented herself as an aspiring novelist, and managed to record audio of the interview as well as take several photographs of Salinger, both without his knowledge or consent.[110] In a separate account, emphasis is placed on her contact by letter writing from the local post office, and Salinger's personal initiative to cross the bridge to meet Eppes, who during the interview made clear she was a reporter and did, at the close, take pictures of Salinger as he departed. According to the first account, the interview ended "disastrously" when a passerby from Cornish attempted to shake Salinger's hand, at which point Salinger became enraged.[111] A further account of the interview published in The Paris Review, purportedly by Eppes, has been disowned by her and separately ascribed as a derived work of Review editor George Plimpton.[112][113][114][self-published source?][115] In an interview published in August 2021, Eppes said that she did record her conversation with Salinger without his knowledge but that she was plagued by guilt over it. She said that she had turned down several lucrative offers for the tape, the only known recording of Salinger's voice, and that she had changed her will to stipulate that it be placed along with her body in the crematorium.[116]

Salinger was romantically involved with television actress Elaine Joyce for several years in the 1980s.[100] The relationship ended when he met Colleen O'Neill (b. June 11, 1959), a nurse and quiltmaker, whom he married around 1988.[117] O'Neill, 40 years his junior, once told Margaret Salinger that she and Salinger were trying to have a child.[118] They did not succeed.

Legal conflicts

Although Salinger tried to escape public exposure as much as possible, he struggled with unwanted attention from the media and the public.[119] Readers of his work and students from nearby Dartmouth College often came to Cornish in groups, hoping to catch a glimpse of him.[120] In May 1986 Salinger learned that the British writer Ian Hamilton intended to publish a biography that made extensive use of letters Salinger had written to other authors and friends. Salinger sued to stop the book's publication and in Salinger v. Random House the court ruled that Hamilton's extensive use of the letters, including quotation and paraphrasing, was not acceptable since the author's right to control publication overrode the right of fair use.[121] Hamilton published In Search of J.D. Salinger: A Writing Life (1935–65) about his experience in tracking down information and the copyright fights over the planned biography.[122]

An unintended consequence of the lawsuit was that many details of Salinger's private life, including that he had spent the last 20 years writing, in his words, "Just a work of fiction ... That's all" became public in the form of court transcripts.[51] Excerpts from his letters were also widely disseminated, most notably a bitter remark written in response to Oona O'Neill's marriage to Charlie Chaplin:

I can see them at home evenings. Chaplin squatting grey and nude, atop his chiffonier, swinging his thyroid around his head by his bamboo cane, like a dead rat. Oona in an aquamarine gown, applauding madly from the bathroom.[28][121]

In 1995, Iranian director Dariush Mehrjui released the film Pari, an unauthorized loose adaptation of Franny and Zooey. The film could be distributed legally in Iran since it has no copyright relations with the United States, but Salinger had his lawyers block a planned 1998 screening of it at Lincoln Center.[123][124] Mehrjui called Salinger's action "bewildering", explaining that he saw his film as "a kind of cultural exchange".[124]

In 1996, Salinger gave a small publisher, Orchises Press, permission to publish "Hapworth 16, 1924".[125] It was to be published that year and listings for it appeared at Amazon.com and other booksellers. After a flurry of articles and critical reviews of the story appeared in the press, the publication date was pushed back repeatedly before apparently being canceled altogether. Amazon anticipated that Orchises would publish the story in January 2009, but at the time of his death, it was still listed as "unavailable".[126][127][128]

In June 2009, Salinger consulted lawyers about the forthcoming U.S. publication of an unauthorized sequel to The Catcher in the Rye, 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye, by Swedish book publisher Fredrik Colting under the pseudonym J. D. California. The book appears to continue the story of Holden Caulfield. In Salinger's novel, Caulfield is 16, wandering the streets of New York after being expelled from private school; the California book features a 76-year-old man, "Mr. C", musing on having escaped his nursing home. Salinger's New York literary agent Phyllis Westberg told Britain's Sunday Telegraph, "The matter has been turned over to a lawyer". The fact that little was known about Colting and the book was set to be published by a new publishing imprint, Windupbird Publishing, gave rise to speculation in literary circles that the whole thing might be a hoax.[129] District court judge Deborah Batts issued an injunction that prevented the book from being published in the U.S.[130][131] Colting filed an appeal on July 23, 2009; it was heard in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals on September 3, 2009.[132][133] The case was settled in 2011 when Colting agreed not to publish or otherwise distribute the book, e-book or any other editions of 60 Years Later in the U.S. or Canada until The Catcher in the Rye enters the public domain, to refrain from using the title Coming through the Rye, dedicate the book to Salinger or refer to The Catcher in the Rye. Colting remains free to sell the book in the rest of the world.[134]

Later publicity

 
Margaret Salinger's memoir Dream Catcher; its cover features a rare photograph of her as a child with her father.

On October 23, 1992, The New York Times reported, "Not even a fire that consumed at least half his home on Tuesday could smoke out the reclusive J. D. Salinger, author of the classic novel of adolescent rebellion, The Catcher in the Rye. Mr. Salinger is almost equally famous for having elevated privacy to an art form."[135]

In 1999, 25 years after the end of their relationship, Maynard auctioned a series of letters Salinger had written her. Her memoir At Home in the World was published the same year. The book describes how Maynard's mother had consulted with her on how to appeal to Salinger by dressing in a childlike manner, and describes Maynard's relationship with him at length. In the ensuing controversy over the memoir and the letters, Maynard claimed that she was forced to auction the letters for financial reasons; she would have preferred to donate them to the Beinecke Library at Yale. Software developer Peter Norton bought the letters for $156,500 and announced that he would return them to Salinger.[136]

A year later, Margaret Salinger published Dream Catcher: A Memoir. In it, she describes the harrowing control Salinger had over her mother and dispelled many of the Salinger myths established by Hamilton's book. One of Hamilton's arguments was that Salinger's experience with post-traumatic stress disorder left him psychologically scarred. Margaret Salinger allowed that "the few men who lived through Bloody Mortain, a battle in which her father fought, were left with much to sicken them, body and soul",[34] but she also painted her father as a man immensely proud of his service record, maintaining his military haircut and service jacket, and moving about his compound (and town) in an old Jeep.

Both Margaret Salinger and Maynard characterized Salinger as a film buff. According to Margaret, his favorite movies included Gigi (1958), The Lady Vanishes (1938), The 39 Steps (1935; Phoebe's favorite movie in The Catcher in the Rye), and the comedies of W.C. Fields, Laurel and Hardy, and the Marx Brothers.[137] Predating VCRs, Salinger had an extensive collection of classic movies from the 1940s in 16 mm prints. Maynard wrote that "he loves movies, not films",[138] and Margaret Salinger argued that her father's "worldview is, essentially, a product of the movies of his day. To my father, all Spanish speakers are Puerto Rican washerwomen, or the toothless, grinning-gypsy types in a Marx Brothers movie."[91] Lillian Ross, a staff writer for The New Yorker and longtime friend of Salinger's, wrote after his death, "Salinger loved movies, and he was more fun than anyone to discuss them with. He enjoyed watching actors work, and he enjoyed knowing them. (He loved Anne Bancroft, hated Audrey Hepburn, and said that he had seen Grand Illusion ten times.)"[52]

Margaret also offered many insights into other Salinger myths, including her father's supposed longtime interest in macrobiotics and involvement with alternative medicine and Eastern philosophies. A few weeks after Dream Catcher was published, Margaret's brother Matt discredited the memoir in a letter to The New York Observer. He disparaged his sister's "gothic tales of our supposed childhood" and wrote, "I can't say with any authority that she is consciously making anything up. I just know that I grew up in a very different house, with two very different parents from those my sister describes."[139]

Death

 
Created for the cover of Time magazine, Robert Vickrey's 1961 portrait of Salinger was placed on view in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., after Salinger's death.[140]

Salinger died from natural causes at his home in New Hampshire on January 27, 2010. He was 91.[141] His literary representative told The New York Times that Salinger had broken his hip in May 2009, but that "his health had been excellent until a rather sudden decline after the new year."[11] His third wife and widow, Colleen O'Neill Zakrzeski Salinger, and Salinger's son Matt became the executors of his estate.[11]

Posthumous publications

Salinger wrote all his life. His widow and son began preparing this work for publication after his death, announcing in 2019 that "all of what he wrote will at some point be shared" but that it was a major undertaking and not yet ready.[142][143]

Literary style and themes

In a contributor's note Salinger gave to Harper's Magazine in 1946, he wrote, "I almost always write about very young people", a statement that has been called his credo.[144] Adolescents are featured or appear in all of Salinger's work, from his first published story, "The Young Folks" (1940), to The Catcher in the Rye and his Glass family stories. In 1961, the critic Alfred Kazin explained that Salinger's choice of teenagers as a subject matter was one reason for his appeal to young readers, but another was "a consciousness [among youths] that he speaks for them and virtually to them, in a language that is peculiarly honest and their own, with a vision of things that capture their most secret judgments of the world."[145] For this reason, Norman Mailer once remarked that Salinger was "the greatest mind ever to stay in prep school."[146] Salinger's language, especially his energetic, realistically sparse dialogue, was revolutionary at the time his first stories were published and was seen by several critics as "the most distinguishing thing" about his work.[147]

Salinger identified closely with his characters,[107] and used techniques such as interior monologue, letters, and extended telephone calls to display his gift for dialogue.

Recurring themes in Salinger's stories also connect to the ideas of innocence and adolescence, including the "corrupting influence of Hollywood and the world at large",[148] the disconnect between teenagers and "phony" adults,[148] and the perceptive, precocious intelligence of children.[39]

Contemporary critics discuss a clear progression over the course of Salinger's published work, as evidenced by the increasingly negative reviews each of his three post-Catcher story collections received.[139][149] Hamilton adheres to this view, arguing that while Salinger's early stories for the "slicks" boasted "tight, energetic" dialogue, they had also been formulaic and sentimental. It took the standards of The New Yorker editors, among them William Shawn, to refine his writing into the "spare, teasingly mysterious, withheld" qualities of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" (1948), The Catcher in the Rye, and his stories of the early 1950s.[150] By the late 1950s, as Salinger became more reclusive and involved in religious study, Hamilton notes that his stories became longer, less plot-driven, and increasingly filled with digression and parenthetical remarks.[151] Louis Menand agrees, writing in The New Yorker that Salinger "stopped writing stories, in the conventional sense ... He seemed to lose interest in fiction as an art form—perhaps he thought there was something manipulative or inauthentic about literary device and authorial control."[39] In recent years, some critics have defended certain post-Nine Stories works by Salinger; in 2001, Janet Malcolm wrote in The New York Review of Books that "Zooey" "is arguably Salinger's masterpiece ... Rereading it and its companion piece 'Franny' is no less rewarding than rereading The Great Gatsby."[139]

Influence

Salinger's writing has influenced several prominent writers, prompting Harold Brodkey (an O. Henry Award-winning author) to say in 1991, "His is the most influential body of work in English prose by anyone since Hemingway."[152] Of the writers in Salinger's generation, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist John Updike, attested that "the short stories of J. D. Salinger really opened my eyes as to how you can weave fiction out of a set of events that seem almost unconnected, or very lightly connected ... [Reading Salinger] stick[s] in my mind as really having moved me a step up, as it were, toward knowing how to handle my own material."[153] Menand has observed that the early stories of Pulitzer Prize-winner Philip Roth were affected by "Salinger's voice and comic timing".[39]

National Book Award finalist Richard Yates told The New York Times in 1977 that reading Salinger's stories for the first time was a landmark experience, and that "nothing quite like it has happened to me since".[154] Yates called Salinger "a man who used language as if it were pure energy beautifully controlled, and who knew exactly what he was doing in every silence as well as in every word." Gordon Lish's O. Henry Award-winning short story "For Jeromé—With Love and Kisses" (1977, collected in What I Know So Far, 1984) is a play on Salinger's "For Esmé—with Love and Squalor".[155][156]

In 2001, Menand wrote in The New Yorker that "Catcher in the Rye rewrites" among each new generation had become "a literary genre all its own".[39] He classed among them Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar (1963), Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1971), Jay McInerney's Bright Lights, Big City (1984), and Dave Eggers's A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (2000). Writer Aimee Bender was struggling with her first short stories when a friend gave her a copy of Nine Stories; inspired, she later described Salinger's effect on writers, explaining: "[I]t feels like Salinger wrote The Catcher in the Rye in a day, and that incredible feeling of ease inspires writing. Inspires the pursuit of voice. Not his voice. My voice. Your voice."[157] Authors such as Stephen Chbosky,[158] Jonathan Safran Foer,[159] Carl Hiaasen, Susan Minot,[160] Haruki Murakami, Gwendoline Riley,[161] Tom Robbins, Louis Sachar,[162] Joel Stein,[163] Leonardo Padura, and John Green have cited Salinger as an influence. Musician Tomas Kalnoky of Streetlight Manifesto also cites Salinger as an influence, referencing him and Holden Caulfield in the song "Here's to Life". Biographer Paul Alexander called Salinger "the Greta Garbo of literature".[164]

In the mid-1960s, Salinger was drawn to Sufi mysticism through the writer and thinker Idries Shah's seminal work The Sufis, as were others writers such as Doris Lessing and Geoffrey Grigson and the poets Robert Graves and Ted Hughes.[165] As well as Shah, Salinger read the Taoist philosopher Lao Tse and the Hindu Swami Vivekananda who introduced the Indian philosophies of Vedanta and Yoga to the Western world.[166]

List of works

Books

Published stories

Unpublished stories

  • "The Survivors" (1939)
  • "The long hotel story" (1940)
  • "The Fishermen" (1941)
  • "Lunch for Three" (1941)
  • "I Went to School with Adolf Hitler" (1941)
  • "Monologue for a Watery Highball" (1941)
  • "The Lovely Dead Girl at Table Six" (1941)
  • "Mrs. Hincher" (1942), also known as "Paula"
  • "The Kissless Life of Reilly" (1942)
  • "The Last and Best of the Peter Pans" (1942)
  • "Holden On the Bus" (1942)
  • "Men Without Hemingway" (1942)
  • "Over the Sea Let’s Go, Twentieth Century Fox" (1942)
  • "The Broken Children" (1943)
  • "Paris" (1943)
  • "Rex Passard on the Planet Mars" (1943)
  • "Bitsey" (1943)
  • "What Got Into Curtis in the Woodshed" (1944)
  • "The Children's Echelon" (1944), also known as "Total War Diary"
  • "Boy Standing in Tennessee" (1944)
  • "The Magic Foxhole" (1944)
  • "Two Lonely Men" (1944)
  • "A Young Man in a Stuffed Shirt" (1944)
  • "The Daughter of the Late, Great Man" (1945)
  • "The Ocean Full of Bowling Balls" (1947)
  • "Birthday Boy" (1946), also known as "The Male Goodbye"[174]
  • "The Boy in the People Shooting Hat" (1948)
  • "A Summer Accident" (1949)
  • "Requiem for the Phantom of the Opera" (1950)

Media portrayals and references

  • In W. P. Kinsella's 1982 novel, Shoeless Joe, the main character "kidnaps" the reclusive Salinger to take him to a baseball game. When the novel was adapted for cinema as Field of Dreams, Salinger's character was replaced by the fictional Terence Mann (played by James Earl Jones), amid fears that Salinger might sue.[175]
  • Sean Connery claimed that Salinger was the inspiration for his role as William Forrester in the 2000 film Finding Forrester.[176]
  • In the 2002 film The Good Girl, the character of Holden (played by Jake Gyllenhaal) adopts the name because of his admiration of The Catcher in the Rye.
  • The anime TV series Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex heavily references J. D. Salinger works including Catcher in the Rye, The Laughing Man and A Perfect Day for Banana Fish.
  • Salinger's name is mentioned in the title for The Wonder Years song "You're Not Salinger. Get Over It."
  • The Catcher in the Rye plays a major part in the South Park episode "The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs", as the boys are inspired to write their own book when they feel Salinger's book does not live up to its controversial reputation.
  • In the film Man at Bath (2010), the character Dustin Segura-Suarez holds Franny and Zooey in his hands while taking a bath.
  • Salinger is a 2013 documentary film that tells the story of Salinger's life through interviews with friends, historians, and journalists.
  • In the book and TV show You by Caroline Kepnes, one of the characters, Peach, is named as being a relative of Salinger.
  • Salinger is portrayed by Chris Cooper in James Steven Sadwith's 2015 film Coming Through the Rye.[177]
  • Salinger appears as a character (voiced by Alan Arkin) in several 2015–2016 episodes of BoJack Horseman (season 2 episodes 6, 7, 8, 10 and season 3 episode 1), where he is said to have faked his own death to escape public attention and ironically pursue a career in television production. He quotes numerous lines from his works, bemoaning how The Catcher in the Rye has become his only recognizable work. In humorous contrast to his real-life beliefs, this rendition of Salinger loves Hollywoo and ends up managing a game show, which he aptly names Hollywoo Stars and Celebrities: What Do They Know? Do They Know Things? Let's Find Out.
  • Salinger was portrayed by Nicholas Hoult in the 2017 film Rebel in the Rye.[178]
  • My Salinger Year is a film directed by Philippe Falardeau released in 2021, based on the 2014 memoir by Joanna Rakoff.

Notes

  1. ^ See Beidler's A Reader's Companion to J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye.

Citations

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References

  • Alexander, Paul (1999). Salinger: A Biography. Los Angeles: Renaissance. ISBN 1-58063-080-4.
  • Crawford, Catherine, ed. (2006). If You Really Want to Hear About It: Writers on J. D. Salinger and His Work. New York: Thunder's Mouth. ISBN 1-56025-880-2.
  • Grunwald, Henry Anatole, ed. (1962). Salinger, the Classic Critical and Personal Portrait. New York: Harper Perennial, Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06185-250-3.
  • French, Warren (1988). J. D. Salinger, Revisted. Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0-8057-7522-6.
  • Hamilton, Ian (1988). In Search of J. D. Salinger. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-394-53468-9.
  • Kubica, Chris; Hochman, Will (2002). Letters to J. D. Salinger. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-17800-5.
  • Lutz, Norma Jean (2002). "Biography of J. D. Salinger". In Bloom, Harold (ed.). J. D. Salinger. Bloom's BioCritiques. Philadelphia: Chelsea House. pp. 3–44. ISBN 0-7910-6175-2. OCLC 48473975.
  • Maynard, Joyce (1998). At Home in the World. New York: Picador. ISBN 0-312-19556-7.
  • Mueller, Bruce F.; Hochman, Will (2011). Critical Companion to J. D. Salinger: a Literary Reference to His Life and Work. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 978-0816065974.
  • Salinger, Margaret (2000). Dream Catcher: A Memoir. New York: Washington Square Press. ISBN 0-671-04281-5.
  • Slawenski, Kenneth (2010). J. D. Salinger: A Life Raised High, London, Pomona Books. ISBN 978-1-904590-23-1
  • Whitfield, Stephen (December 1997). (PDF). The New England Quarterly. 70 (4): 567–600. doi:10.2307/366646. JSTOR 366646. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 12, 2012. Retrieved November 2, 2012.
Reprinted in Bloom, Harold, ed. (2001). J. D. Salinger. Bloom's BioCritiques. Philadelphia: Chelsea House. pp. 77–105. ISBN 0-7910-6175-2.

External links

  • McGrath, Charles (January 28, 2010). "J. D. Salinger, Literary Recluse, Dies at 91". The New York Times.
  • The Reclusive Writer Inspired a Generation, Baltimore Sun, January 29, 2010
  • JD Salinger – Daily Telegraph obituary
  • Obituary: JD Salinger, BBC News, January 28, 2010
  • J.D. Salinger (1919–2010): An appreciation World Socialist Web Site. February 2, 2010.
  • Dead Caulfields – The Life and Work of J.D. Salinger
  • Catching Salinger – Serialized documentary about the search for J.D. Salinger
  • J.D. Salinger June 1, 2019, at the Wayback Machine biography, quotes, multimedia, teacher resources
  • On J.D. Salinger by Michael Greenberg from The New York Review of Books
  • Essay on Salinger's life from Haaretz
  • Works by J. D. Salinger at Open Library  
  • J.D. Salinger – Hartog Letters, University of East Anglia
  • Salinger and 'Catcher in the Rye' January 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine — slideshow by Life magazine
  • The Man in the Glass House — Ron Rosenbaum's 1997 profile for Esquire
  • J. D. Salinger at IMDb
  • J. D. Salinger at Library of Congress Authorities, with 18 catalog records

salinger, jerome, david, salinger, january, 1919, january, 2010, american, author, best, known, 1951, novel, catcher, salinger, start, 1940, before, serving, world, publishing, several, short, stories, story, magazine, 1948, critically, acclaimed, story, perfe. Jerome David Salinger ˈ s ae l ɪ n dʒ er January 1 1919 January 27 2010 was an American author best known for his 1951 novel The Catcher in the Rye Salinger got his start in 1940 before serving in World War II by publishing several short stories in Story magazine 1 In 1948 his critically acclaimed story A Perfect Day for Bananafish appeared in The New Yorker which published much of his later work 2 3 J D SalingerSalinger in 1950BornJerome David Salinger 1919 01 01 January 1 1919New York City U S DiedJanuary 27 2010 2010 01 27 aged 91 Cornish New Hampshire U S OccupationAuthor writerEducationNew York UniversityUrsinus CollegeColumbia UniversityNotable worksThe Catcher in the Rye 1951 Nine Stories 1953 Franny and Zooey 1961 Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters and Seymour An Introduction 1963 SpouseSylvia Welter m 1945 div 1947 wbr Claire Douglas m 1955 div 1967 wbr Colleen O Neill m 1988 wbr Children2 including MattSignatureThe Catcher in the Rye 1951 was an immediate popular success Salinger s depiction of adolescent alienation and loss of innocence was influential especially among adolescent readers 4 The novel was widely read and controversial a and its success led to public attention and scrutiny Salinger became reclusive publishing less frequently He followed Catcher with a short story collection Nine Stories 1953 Franny and Zooey 1961 a volume containing a novella and a short story and a volume containing two novellas Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters and Seymour An Introduction 1963 Salinger s last published work the novella Hapworth 16 1924 appeared in The New Yorker on June 19 1965 Afterward Salinger struggled with unwanted attention including a legal battle in the 1980s with biographer Ian Hamilton and the release in the late 1990s of memoirs written by two people close to him Joyce Maynard an ex lover and his daughter Margaret Salinger Contents 1 Early life 2 World War II 3 Postwar years 4 The Catcher in the Rye 5 Writing in the 1950s and move to Cornish 6 Second marriage family and spiritual beliefs 7 Last publications and Maynard relationship 8 Legal conflicts 9 Later publicity 10 Death 11 Posthumous publications 12 Literary style and themes 13 Influence 14 List of works 14 1 Books 14 2 Published stories 14 3 Unpublished stories 15 Media portrayals and references 16 Notes 17 Citations 18 References 19 External linksEarly life Edit Where Salinger grew up 1133 Park Avenue in Manhattan Jerome David Salinger was born in Manhattan New York on January 1 1919 5 His father Sol Salinger traded in Kosher cheese and was from a family of Lithuanian Jewish descent 6 Sol s father having been the rabbi for Adath Jeshurun Congregation in Louisville Kentucky 7 Salinger s mother Marie nee Jillich was born in Atlantic Iowa of German Irish and Scottish descent 8 9 10 but changed her first name to Miriam to appease her in laws 11 and considered herself Jewish after marrying Salinger s father 12 Salinger did not learn that his mother was not of Jewish ancestry until just after he celebrated his Bar Mitzvah 13 He had one sibling an older sister Doris 1912 2001 14 In his youth Salinger attended public schools on the West Side of Manhattan In 1932 the family moved to Park Avenue and Salinger enrolled at the McBurney School a nearby private school 10 Salinger had trouble fitting in there and took measures to conform such as calling himself Jerry 15 His family called him Sonny 16 At McBurney he managed the fencing team wrote for the school newspaper and appeared in plays 10 He showed an innate talent for drama though his father opposed the idea of his becoming an actor 17 His parents then enrolled him at Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne Pennsylvania 10 Salinger began writing stories under the covers at night with the aid of a flashlight 18 He was the literary editor of the class yearbook Crossed Sabres and participated in the glee club aviation club French club and the Non Commissioned Officers Club 15 Salinger s Valley Forge 201 file says he was a mediocre student and his recorded IQ between 111 and 115 was slightly above average 19 20 He graduated in 1936 Salinger started his freshman year at New York University in 1936 He considered studying special education 21 but dropped out the following spring That fall his father urged him to learn about the meat importing business and he went to work at a company in Vienna and Bydgoszcz Poland 22 Surprisingly Salinger went willingly but he was so disgusted by the slaughterhouses that he firmly decided to embark on a different career His disgust for the meat business and rejection of his father likely influenced his vegetarianism as an adult 23 He left Austria one month before it was annexed by Nazi Germany on March 12 1938 citation needed In the fall of 1938 Salinger attended Ursinus College in Collegeville Pennsylvania and wrote a column called skipped diploma which included movie reviews 24 He dropped out after one semester 10 16 In 1939 Salinger attended the Columbia University School of General Studies in Manhattan where he took a writing class taught by Whit Burnett longtime editor of Story magazine According to Burnett Salinger did not distinguish himself until a few weeks before the end of the second semester at which point he suddenly came to life and completed three stories 25 Burnett told Salinger that his stories were skillful and accomplished accepting The Young Folks a vignette about several aimless youths for publication in Story 25 Salinger s debut short story was published in the magazine s March April 1940 issue Burnett became Salinger s mentor and they corresponded for several years 15 26 World War II EditIn 1942 Salinger started dating Oona O Neill daughter of the playwright Eugene O Neill Despite finding her immeasurably self absorbed he confided to a friend that Little Oona s hopelessly in love with little Oona he called her often and wrote her long letters 27 Their relationship ended when Oona began seeing Charlie Chaplin whom she eventually married 28 In late 1941 Salinger briefly worked on a Caribbean cruise ship serving as an activity director and possibly a performer 29 The same year Salinger began submitting short stories to The New Yorker The magazine rejected seven of his stories that year including Lunch for Three Monologue for a Watery Highball and I Went to School with Adolf Hitler But in December 1941 it accepted Slight Rebellion off Madison a Manhattan set story about a disaffected teenager named Holden Caulfield with pre war jitters 30 When Japan carried out the attack on Pearl Harbor that month the story was rendered unpublishable Salinger was devastated The story appeared in The New Yorker in 1946 30 In the spring of 1942 several months after the U S entered World War II Salinger was drafted into the army where he saw combat with the 12th Infantry Regiment 4th Infantry Division 29 He was present at Utah Beach on D Day in the Battle of the Bulge and the Battle of Hurtgen Forest 31 15 During the campaign from Normandy into Germany Salinger arranged to meet with Ernest Hemingway a writer who had influenced him and was then working as a war correspondent in Paris 32 Salinger was impressed with Hemingway s friendliness and modesty finding him more soft than his gruff public persona 33 Hemingway was impressed by Salinger s writing and remarked Jesus he has a helluva talent 4 The two began corresponding Salinger wrote to Hemingway in July 1946 that their talks were among his few positive memories of the war 33 and added that he was working on a play about Caulfield and hoped to play the part himself 33 Salinger was assigned to a counter intelligence unit also known as the Ritchie Boys in which he used his proficiency in French and German to interrogate prisoners of war 34 In April 1945 he entered Kaufering IV concentration camp a subcamp of Dachau Salinger earned the rank of Staff Sergeant 35 and served in five campaigns 36 His war experiences affected him emotionally He was hospitalized for a few weeks for combat stress reaction after Germany was defeated 37 38 and later told his daughter You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely no matter how long you live 34 Both his biographers speculate that Salinger drew upon his wartime experiences in several stories 39 such as For Esme with Love and Squalor which is narrated by a traumatized soldier Salinger continued to write while serving in the army publishing several stories in slick magazines such as Collier s and The Saturday Evening Post He also continued to submit stories to The New Yorker but with little success it rejected all of his submissions from 1944 to 1946 including a group of 15 poems in 1945 30 Postwar years EditAfter Germany s defeat Salinger signed up for a six month period of Denazification duty in Germany 40 for the Counterintelligence Corps He lived in Weissenburg and soon after married Sylvia Welter He brought her to the United States in April 1946 but the marriage fell apart after eight months and Sylvia returned to Germany 41 In 1972 Salinger s daughter Margaret was with him when he received a letter from Sylvia He looked at the envelope and without reading it tore it apart It was the first time he had heard from her since the breakup but as Margaret put it when he was finished with a person he was through with them 42 In 1946 Whit Burnett agreed to help Salinger publish a collection of his short stories through Story Press s Lippincott Imprint 43 The collection The Young Folks was to consist of 20 stories ten like the title story and Slight Rebellion off Madison already in print and ten previously unpublished 43 Though Burnett implied the book would be published and even negotiated Salinger a 1 000 advance Lippincott overruled Burnett and rejected the book 43 Salinger blamed Burnett for the book s failure to see print and the two became estranged 44 By the late 1940s Salinger had become an avid follower of Zen Buddhism to the point that he gave reading lists on the subject to his dates 4 and arranged a meeting with Buddhist scholar D T Suzuki citation needed In 1947 Salinger submitted a short story The Bananafish to The New Yorker William Maxwell the magazine s fiction editor was impressed enough with the singular quality of the story that the magazine asked Salinger to continue revising it He spent a year reworking it with New Yorker editors and the magazine published it now titled A Perfect Day for Bananafish in the January 31 1948 issue The magazine thereon offered Salinger a first look contract that allowed it right of first refusal on any future stories 45 The critical acclaim accorded Bananafish coupled with problems Salinger had with stories being altered by the slicks led him to publish almost exclusively in The New Yorker 46 Bananafish was also the first of Salinger s published stories to feature the Glasses a fictional family consisting of two retired vaudeville performers and their seven precocious children Seymour Buddy Boo Boo Walt Waker Zooey and Franny 47 Salinger published seven stories about the Glasses developing a detailed family history and focusing particularly on Seymour the brilliant but troubled eldest child 47 In the early 1940s Salinger confided in a letter to Burnett that he was eager to sell the film rights to some of his stories to achieve financial security 48 According to Ian Hamilton Salinger was disappointed when rumblings from Hollywood over his 1943 short story The Varioni Brothers came to nothing Therefore he immediately agreed when in mid 1948 independent film producer Samuel Goldwyn offered to buy the film rights to his short story Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut 48 Though Salinger sold the story with the hope in the words of his agent Dorothy Olding that it would make a good movie 49 critics lambasted the film upon its release in 1949 50 Renamed My Foolish Heart and starring Dana Andrews and Susan Hayward the film departed to such an extent from Salinger s story that Goldwyn biographer A Scott Berg called it a bastardization 50 As a result of this experience Salinger never again permitted film adaptations of his work 51 When Brigitte Bardot wanted to buy the rights to A Perfect Day for Bananafish Salinger refused but told his friend Lillian Ross longtime staff writer for The New Yorker She s a cute talented lost enfante and I m tempted to accommodate her pour le sport 52 The Catcher in the Rye EditMain article The Catcher in the Rye Cover and spine of The Catcher in the Rye first edition In the 1940s Salinger confided to several people that he was working on a novel featuring Holden Caulfield the teenage protagonist of his short story Slight Rebellion off Madison 53 and Little Brown and Company published The Catcher in the Rye on July 16 1951 54 The novel s plot is straightforward 55 detailing 16 year old Holden s experiences in New York City after his fourth expulsion and departure from an elite college preparatory school 56 The book is more notable for the persona and testimonial voice of its first person narrator Holden 57 He serves as an insightful but unreliable narrator who expounds on the importance of loyalty the phoniness of adulthood and his own duplicity 57 In a 1953 interview with a high school newspaper Salinger admitted that the novel was sort of autobiographical explaining My boyhood was very much the same as that of the boy in the book and it was a great relief telling people about it 58 Initial reactions to the book were mixed ranging from The New York Times hailing Catcher as an unusually brilliant first novel 59 to denigrations of the book s monotonous language and Holden s immorality and perversion 60 he uses religious slurs and freely discusses casual sex and prostitution 61 The novel was a popular success within two months of its publication it had been reprinted eight times It spent 30 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller list 55 The book s initial success was followed by a brief lull in popularity but by the late 1950s according to his biographer Ian Hamilton it had become the book all brooding adolescents had to buy the indispensable manual from which cool styles of disaffectation could be borrowed 62 It has been compared to Mark Twain s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 63 Newspapers began publishing articles about the Catcher Cult 62 and the novel was banned in several countries as well as some U S schools because of its subject matter and what Catholic World reviewer Riley Hughes called an excessive use of amateur swearing and coarse language 64 According to one angry parent s tabulation 237 instances of goddamn 58 uses of bastard 31 Chrissakes and one incident of flatulence constituted what was wrong with Salinger s book 64 In the 1970s several U S high school teachers who assigned the book were fired or forced to resign A 1979 study of censorship noted that The Catcher in the Rye had the dubious distinction of being at once the most frequently censored book across the nation and the second most frequently taught novel in public high schools after John Steinbeck s Of Mice and Men 65 66 The book remains widely read as of 2004 it was selling about 250 000 copies per year with total worldwide sales over 10 million copies 67 Mark David Chapman who shot singer songwriter John Lennon in December 1980 was obsessed with the book His main motive was his frustration with Lennon s lifestyle and public statements as well as delusions he suffered related to Holden Caulfield 68 69 In the wake of its 1950s success Salinger received and rejected numerous offers to adapt The Catcher in the Rye for the screen including one from Samuel Goldwyn 50 Since its publication there has been sustained interest in the novel among filmmakers with Billy Wilder 70 Harvey Weinstein and Steven Spielberg 71 among those seeking to secure the rights In the 1970s Salinger said Jerry Lewis tried for years to get his hands on the part of Holden 72 Salinger repeatedly refused and in 1999 his ex lover Joyce Maynard concluded The only person who might ever have played Holden Caulfield would have been J D Salinger 72 Writing in the 1950s and move to Cornish EditIn a July 1951 profile in Book of the Month Club News Salinger s friend and New Yorker editor William Maxwell asked Salinger about his literary influences He replied A writer when he s asked to discuss his craft ought to get up and call out in a loud voice just the names of the writers he loves I love Kafka Flaubert Tolstoy Chekhov Dostoevsky Proust O Casey Rilke Lorca Keats Rimbaud Burns E Bronte Jane Austen Henry James Blake Coleridge I won t name any living writers I don t think it s right although O Casey was in fact alive at the time 73 In letters from the 1940s Salinger expressed his admiration of three living or recently deceased writers Sherwood Anderson Ring Lardner and F Scott Fitzgerald 74 Ian Hamilton wrote that Salinger even saw himself for some time as Fitzgerald s successor 75 Salinger s A Perfect Day for Bananafish has an ending similar to that of Fitzgerald s story May Day 76 Salinger wrote friends of a momentous change in his life in 1952 after several years of practicing Zen Buddhism while reading The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna about Hindu religious teacher Sri Ramakrishna 77 He became an adherent of Ramakrishna s Advaita Vedanta Hinduism which advocated celibacy for those seeking enlightenment and detachment from human responsibilities such as family 78 79 Salinger s religious studies were reflected in some of his writing The story Teddy features a ten year old child who expresses Vedantic insights 80 He also studied the writings of Ramakrishna s disciple Vivekananda in Hapworth 16 1924 Seymour Glass calls him one of the most exciting original and best equipped giants of this century 78 In 1953 Salinger published a collection of seven stories from The New Yorker including Bananafish as well as two the magazine had rejected The collection was published as Nine Stories in the United States and For Esme with Love and Squalor in the UK after one of Salinger s best known stories 81 The book received grudgingly positive reviews and was a financial success remarkably so for a volume of short stories according to Hamilton 82 Nine Stories spent three months on the New York Times Bestseller list 82 Already tightening his grip on publicity Salinger refused to allow publishers of the collection to depict his characters in dust jacket illustrations lest readers form preconceived notions of them citation needed As The Catcher in the Rye s notability grew Salinger gradually withdrew from public view In 1953 he moved from an apartment at 300 East 57th Street 83 New York to Cornish New Hampshire Early in his time at Cornish he was relatively sociable particularly with students at Windsor High School Salinger invited them to his house frequently to play records and talk about problems at school 84 One such student Shirley Blaney persuaded Salinger to be interviewed for the high school page of The Daily Eagle the city paper After the interview appeared prominently in the newspaper s editorial section Salinger cut off all contact with the high schoolers without explanation 84 He was also seen less frequently around town meeting only one close friend jurist Learned Hand with any regularity 85 He also began to publish less often After Nine Stories he published only four stories in the rest of the decade two in 1955 and one each in 1957 and 1959 citation needed Second marriage family and spiritual beliefs EditIn February 1955 at age 36 Salinger married Claire Douglas b 1933 a Radcliffe student who was art critic Robert Langton Douglas s daughter They had two children Margaret Salinger also known as Peggy born December 10 1955 and Matthew Matt Salinger born February 13 1960 Margaret Salinger wrote in her memoir Dream Catcher that she believes her parents would not have married nor would she have been born had her father not read the teachings of Lahiri Mahasaya a guru of Paramahansa Yogananda which brought the possibility of enlightenment to those following the path of the householder a married person with children 86 After their marriage Salinger and Claire were initiated into the path of Kriya yoga in a small store front Hindu temple in Washington D C during the summer of 1955 87 They received a mantra and breathing exercise to practice for ten minutes twice a day 87 Salinger also insisted that Claire drop out of school and live with him only four months shy of graduation which she did Certain elements of the story Franny published in January 1955 are based on his relationship with Claire including her ownership of the book The Way of the Pilgrim 88 Because of their isolated location in Cornish and Salinger s proclivities they hardly saw other people for long stretches of time Claire was also frustrated by Salinger s ever changing religious beliefs Though she committed herself to Kriya yoga Salinger chronically left Cornish to work on a story for several weeks only to return with the piece he was supposed to be finishing all undone or destroyed and some new ism we had to follow 89 Claire believed it was to cover the fact that Jerry had just destroyed or junked or couldn t face the quality of or couldn t face publishing what he had created 89 After abandoning Kriya yoga Salinger tried Dianetics the forerunner of Scientology even meeting its founder L Ron Hubbard but according to Claire was quickly disenchanted with it 89 90 This was followed by an adherence to a number of spiritual medical and nutritional belief systems including Christian Science Edgar Cayce homeopathy acupuncture and macrobiotics 91 Salinger s family life was further marked by discord after his first child was born according to Margaret s book Claire felt that her daughter had replaced her in Salinger s affections 92 The infant Margaret was sick much of the time but Salinger having embraced Christian Science refused to take her to a doctor 93 According to Margaret her mother admitted to her years later that she went over the edge in the winter of 1957 and had made plans to murder her and then commit suicide Claire had supposedly intended to do it during a trip to New York City with Salinger but she instead acted on a sudden impulse to take Margaret from the hotel and run away After a few months Salinger persuaded her to return to Cornish 93 The Salingers divorced in 1967 with Claire getting custody of the children 94 Salinger remained close to his family 95 He built a new house for himself across the road and visited frequently 95 Nancy Clark Reynolds had been a love interest of Salinger 96 Last publications and Maynard relationship Edit Salinger on the cover of Time September 15 1961 Salinger published Franny and Zooey in 1961 and Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters and Seymour An Introduction in 1963 Each book contained two short stories or novellas published in The New Yorker between 1955 and 1959 and were the only stories Salinger had published since Nine Stories On the dust jacket of Franny and Zooey Salinger wrote in reference to his interest in privacy It is my rather subversive opinion that a writer s feelings of anonymity obscurity are the second most valuable property on loan to him during his working years 97 On September 15 1961 Time magazine devoted its cover to Salinger In an article that profiled his life of recluse the magazine reported that the Glass family series is nowhere near completion Salinger intends to write a Glass trilogy 4 But Salinger published only one other thing after that Hapworth 16 1924 a novella in the form of a long letter by seven year old Seymour Glass to his parents from summer camp His first new work in six years the novella took up most of the June 19 1965 issue of The New Yorker and was universally panned by critics Around this time Salinger had isolated Claire from friends and relatives and made her in Margaret Salinger s words a virtual prisoner 89 Claire separated from him in September 1966 their divorce was finalized on October 3 1967 98 In 1972 at age 53 Salinger had a relationship with 18 year old Joyce Maynard that lasted for nine months Maynard was already an experienced writer for Seventeen magazine The New York Times had asked her to write an article that when published as An Eighteen Year Old Looks Back On Life on April 23 1972 99 made her a celebrity Salinger wrote her a letter warning about living with fame After exchanging 25 letters Maynard moved in with Salinger the summer after her freshman year at Yale University 100 Maynard did not return to Yale that fall and spent ten months as a guest in Salinger s house The relationship ended he told Margaret at a family outing because Maynard wanted children and he felt he was too old 101 In her autobiography Maynard paints a different picture saying Salinger abruptly ended the relationship sent her away and refused to take her back She had dropped out of Yale to be with him even forgoing a scholarship Maynard came to find out that Salinger had begun several relationships with young women by exchanging letters One of them was his last wife a nurse who was already engaged to be married to someone else when she met him 102 In a 2021 Vanity Fair article Maynard wrote I was groomed to be the sexual partner of a narcissist who nearly derailed my life in the years that followed I heard from well over a dozen women who had a similar set of treasured letters from Salinger in their possession written to them when they were teenagers It appeared that in the case of one girl Salinger was writing letters to her while I sat in the next room believing he was my soul mate and partner for life 103 While he was living with Maynard Salinger continued to write in a disciplined fashion a few hours every morning According to Maynard by 1972 he had completed two new novels 104 105 In a 1974 interview with The New York Times he said There is a marvelous peace in not publishing I like to write I love to write But I write just for myself and my own pleasure 106 According to Maynard he saw publication as a damned interruption 107 In her memoir Margaret Salinger describes the detailed filing system her father had for his unpublished manuscripts A red mark meant if I die before I finish my work publish this as is blue meant publish but edit first and so on 108 A neighbor said that Salinger told him that he had written 15 unpublished novels 109 Salinger s final interview was in June 1980 with Betty Eppes of The Baton Rouge Advocate which has been represented somewhat differently depending on the secondary source By one account Eppes was an attractive young woman who misrepresented herself as an aspiring novelist and managed to record audio of the interview as well as take several photographs of Salinger both without his knowledge or consent 110 In a separate account emphasis is placed on her contact by letter writing from the local post office and Salinger s personal initiative to cross the bridge to meet Eppes who during the interview made clear she was a reporter and did at the close take pictures of Salinger as he departed According to the first account the interview ended disastrously when a passerby from Cornish attempted to shake Salinger s hand at which point Salinger became enraged 111 A further account of the interview published in The Paris Review purportedly by Eppes has been disowned by her and separately ascribed as a derived work of Review editor George Plimpton 112 113 114 self published source 115 In an interview published in August 2021 Eppes said that she did record her conversation with Salinger without his knowledge but that she was plagued by guilt over it She said that she had turned down several lucrative offers for the tape the only known recording of Salinger s voice and that she had changed her will to stipulate that it be placed along with her body in the crematorium 116 Salinger was romantically involved with television actress Elaine Joyce for several years in the 1980s 100 The relationship ended when he met Colleen O Neill b June 11 1959 a nurse and quiltmaker whom he married around 1988 117 O Neill 40 years his junior once told Margaret Salinger that she and Salinger were trying to have a child 118 They did not succeed Legal conflicts EditAlthough Salinger tried to escape public exposure as much as possible he struggled with unwanted attention from the media and the public 119 Readers of his work and students from nearby Dartmouth College often came to Cornish in groups hoping to catch a glimpse of him 120 In May 1986 Salinger learned that the British writer Ian Hamilton intended to publish a biography that made extensive use of letters Salinger had written to other authors and friends Salinger sued to stop the book s publication and in Salinger v Random House the court ruled that Hamilton s extensive use of the letters including quotation and paraphrasing was not acceptable since the author s right to control publication overrode the right of fair use 121 Hamilton published In Search of J D Salinger A Writing Life 1935 65 about his experience in tracking down information and the copyright fights over the planned biography 122 An unintended consequence of the lawsuit was that many details of Salinger s private life including that he had spent the last 20 years writing in his words Just a work of fiction That s all became public in the form of court transcripts 51 Excerpts from his letters were also widely disseminated most notably a bitter remark written in response to Oona O Neill s marriage to Charlie Chaplin I can see them at home evenings Chaplin squatting grey and nude atop his chiffonier swinging his thyroid around his head by his bamboo cane like a dead rat Oona in an aquamarine gown applauding madly from the bathroom 28 121 In 1995 Iranian director Dariush Mehrjui released the film Pari an unauthorized loose adaptation of Franny and Zooey The film could be distributed legally in Iran since it has no copyright relations with the United States but Salinger had his lawyers block a planned 1998 screening of it at Lincoln Center 123 124 Mehrjui called Salinger s action bewildering explaining that he saw his film as a kind of cultural exchange 124 In 1996 Salinger gave a small publisher Orchises Press permission to publish Hapworth 16 1924 125 It was to be published that year and listings for it appeared at Amazon com and other booksellers After a flurry of articles and critical reviews of the story appeared in the press the publication date was pushed back repeatedly before apparently being canceled altogether Amazon anticipated that Orchises would publish the story in January 2009 but at the time of his death it was still listed as unavailable 126 127 128 In June 2009 Salinger consulted lawyers about the forthcoming U S publication of an unauthorized sequel to The Catcher in the Rye 60 Years Later Coming Through the Rye by Swedish book publisher Fredrik Colting under the pseudonym J D California The book appears to continue the story of Holden Caulfield In Salinger s novel Caulfield is 16 wandering the streets of New York after being expelled from private school the California book features a 76 year old man Mr C musing on having escaped his nursing home Salinger s New York literary agent Phyllis Westberg told Britain s Sunday Telegraph The matter has been turned over to a lawyer The fact that little was known about Colting and the book was set to be published by a new publishing imprint Windupbird Publishing gave rise to speculation in literary circles that the whole thing might be a hoax 129 District court judge Deborah Batts issued an injunction that prevented the book from being published in the U S 130 131 Colting filed an appeal on July 23 2009 it was heard in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals on September 3 2009 132 133 The case was settled in 2011 when Colting agreed not to publish or otherwise distribute the book e book or any other editions of 60 Years Later in the U S or Canada until The Catcher in the Rye enters the public domain to refrain from using the title Coming through the Rye dedicate the book to Salinger or refer to The Catcher in the Rye Colting remains free to sell the book in the rest of the world 134 Later publicity Edit Margaret Salinger s memoir Dream Catcher its cover features a rare photograph of her as a child with her father On October 23 1992 The New York Times reported Not even a fire that consumed at least half his home on Tuesday could smoke out the reclusive J D Salinger author of the classic novel of adolescent rebellion The Catcher in the Rye Mr Salinger is almost equally famous for having elevated privacy to an art form 135 In 1999 25 years after the end of their relationship Maynard auctioned a series of letters Salinger had written her Her memoir At Home in the World was published the same year The book describes how Maynard s mother had consulted with her on how to appeal to Salinger by dressing in a childlike manner and describes Maynard s relationship with him at length In the ensuing controversy over the memoir and the letters Maynard claimed that she was forced to auction the letters for financial reasons she would have preferred to donate them to the Beinecke Library at Yale Software developer Peter Norton bought the letters for 156 500 and announced that he would return them to Salinger 136 A year later Margaret Salinger published Dream Catcher A Memoir In it she describes the harrowing control Salinger had over her mother and dispelled many of the Salinger myths established by Hamilton s book One of Hamilton s arguments was that Salinger s experience with post traumatic stress disorder left him psychologically scarred Margaret Salinger allowed that the few men who lived through Bloody Mortain a battle in which her father fought were left with much to sicken them body and soul 34 but she also painted her father as a man immensely proud of his service record maintaining his military haircut and service jacket and moving about his compound and town in an old Jeep Both Margaret Salinger and Maynard characterized Salinger as a film buff According to Margaret his favorite movies included Gigi 1958 The Lady Vanishes 1938 The 39 Steps 1935 Phoebe s favorite movie in The Catcher in the Rye and the comedies of W C Fields Laurel and Hardy and the Marx Brothers 137 Predating VCRs Salinger had an extensive collection of classic movies from the 1940s in 16 mm prints Maynard wrote that he loves movies not films 138 and Margaret Salinger argued that her father s worldview is essentially a product of the movies of his day To my father all Spanish speakers are Puerto Rican washerwomen or the toothless grinning gypsy types in a Marx Brothers movie 91 Lillian Ross a staff writer for The New Yorker and longtime friend of Salinger s wrote after his death Salinger loved movies and he was more fun than anyone to discuss them with He enjoyed watching actors work and he enjoyed knowing them He loved Anne Bancroft hated Audrey Hepburn and said that he had seen Grand Illusion ten times 52 Margaret also offered many insights into other Salinger myths including her father s supposed longtime interest in macrobiotics and involvement with alternative medicine and Eastern philosophies A few weeks after Dream Catcher was published Margaret s brother Matt discredited the memoir in a letter to The New York Observer He disparaged his sister s gothic tales of our supposed childhood and wrote I can t say with any authority that she is consciously making anything up I just know that I grew up in a very different house with two very different parents from those my sister describes 139 Death Edit Created for the cover of Time magazine Robert Vickrey s 1961 portrait of Salinger was placed on view in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington D C after Salinger s death 140 Salinger died from natural causes at his home in New Hampshire on January 27 2010 He was 91 141 His literary representative told The New York Times that Salinger had broken his hip in May 2009 but that his health had been excellent until a rather sudden decline after the new year 11 His third wife and widow Colleen O Neill Zakrzeski Salinger and Salinger s son Matt became the executors of his estate 11 Posthumous publications EditSalinger wrote all his life His widow and son began preparing this work for publication after his death announcing in 2019 that all of what he wrote will at some point be shared but that it was a major undertaking and not yet ready 142 143 Literary style and themes EditIn a contributor s note Salinger gave to Harper s Magazine in 1946 he wrote I almost always write about very young people a statement that has been called his credo 144 Adolescents are featured or appear in all of Salinger s work from his first published story The Young Folks 1940 to The Catcher in the Rye and his Glass family stories In 1961 the critic Alfred Kazin explained that Salinger s choice of teenagers as a subject matter was one reason for his appeal to young readers but another was a consciousness among youths that he speaks for them and virtually to them in a language that is peculiarly honest and their own with a vision of things that capture their most secret judgments of the world 145 For this reason Norman Mailer once remarked that Salinger was the greatest mind ever to stay in prep school 146 Salinger s language especially his energetic realistically sparse dialogue was revolutionary at the time his first stories were published and was seen by several critics as the most distinguishing thing about his work 147 Salinger identified closely with his characters 107 and used techniques such as interior monologue letters and extended telephone calls to display his gift for dialogue Recurring themes in Salinger s stories also connect to the ideas of innocence and adolescence including the corrupting influence of Hollywood and the world at large 148 the disconnect between teenagers and phony adults 148 and the perceptive precocious intelligence of children 39 Contemporary critics discuss a clear progression over the course of Salinger s published work as evidenced by the increasingly negative reviews each of his three post Catcher story collections received 139 149 Hamilton adheres to this view arguing that while Salinger s early stories for the slicks boasted tight energetic dialogue they had also been formulaic and sentimental It took the standards of The New Yorker editors among them William Shawn to refine his writing into the spare teasingly mysterious withheld qualities of A Perfect Day for Bananafish 1948 The Catcher in the Rye and his stories of the early 1950s 150 By the late 1950s as Salinger became more reclusive and involved in religious study Hamilton notes that his stories became longer less plot driven and increasingly filled with digression and parenthetical remarks 151 Louis Menand agrees writing in The New Yorker that Salinger stopped writing stories in the conventional sense He seemed to lose interest in fiction as an art form perhaps he thought there was something manipulative or inauthentic about literary device and authorial control 39 In recent years some critics have defended certain post Nine Stories works by Salinger in 2001 Janet Malcolm wrote in The New York Review of Books that Zooey is arguably Salinger s masterpiece Rereading it and its companion piece Franny is no less rewarding than rereading The Great Gatsby 139 Influence EditSalinger s writing has influenced several prominent writers prompting Harold Brodkey an O Henry Award winning author to say in 1991 His is the most influential body of work in English prose by anyone since Hemingway 152 Of the writers in Salinger s generation Pulitzer Prize winning novelist John Updike attested that the short stories of J D Salinger really opened my eyes as to how you can weave fiction out of a set of events that seem almost unconnected or very lightly connected Reading Salinger stick s in my mind as really having moved me a step up as it were toward knowing how to handle my own material 153 Menand has observed that the early stories of Pulitzer Prize winner Philip Roth were affected by Salinger s voice and comic timing 39 National Book Award finalist Richard Yates told The New York Times in 1977 that reading Salinger s stories for the first time was a landmark experience and that nothing quite like it has happened to me since 154 Yates called Salinger a man who used language as if it were pure energy beautifully controlled and who knew exactly what he was doing in every silence as well as in every word Gordon Lish s O Henry Award winning short story For Jerome With Love and Kisses 1977 collected in What I Know So Far 1984 is a play on Salinger s For Esme with Love and Squalor 155 156 In 2001 Menand wrote in The New Yorker that Catcher in the Rye rewrites among each new generation had become a literary genre all its own 39 He classed among them Sylvia Plath s The Bell Jar 1963 Hunter S Thompson s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas 1971 Jay McInerney s Bright Lights Big City 1984 and Dave Eggers s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius 2000 Writer Aimee Bender was struggling with her first short stories when a friend gave her a copy of Nine Stories inspired she later described Salinger s effect on writers explaining I t feels like Salinger wrote The Catcher in the Rye in a day and that incredible feeling of ease inspires writing Inspires the pursuit of voice Not his voice My voice Your voice 157 Authors such as Stephen Chbosky 158 Jonathan Safran Foer 159 Carl Hiaasen Susan Minot 160 Haruki Murakami Gwendoline Riley 161 Tom Robbins Louis Sachar 162 Joel Stein 163 Leonardo Padura and John Green have cited Salinger as an influence Musician Tomas Kalnoky of Streetlight Manifesto also cites Salinger as an influence referencing him and Holden Caulfield in the song Here s to Life Biographer Paul Alexander called Salinger the Greta Garbo of literature 164 In the mid 1960s Salinger was drawn to Sufi mysticism through the writer and thinker Idries Shah s seminal work The Sufis as were others writers such as Doris Lessing and Geoffrey Grigson and the poets Robert Graves and Ted Hughes 165 As well as Shah Salinger read the Taoist philosopher Lao Tse and the Hindu Swami Vivekananda who introduced the Indian philosophies of Vedanta and Yoga to the Western world 166 List of works EditBooks Edit The Catcher in the Rye 1951 Nine Stories 1953 A Perfect Day for Bananafish 1948 Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut 1948 Just Before the War with the Eskimos 1948 167 The Laughing Man 1949 168 Down at the Dinghy 1949 168 For Esme with Love and Squalor 1950 Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes 1951 169 De Daumier Smith s Blue Period 1952 170 Teddy 1953 170 Franny and Zooey 1961 reworked from Ivanoff the Terrible 1956 171 Franny 1955 Zooey 1957 172 Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters and Seymour An Introduction 1963 Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters 1955 Seymour An Introduction 1959 173 Three Early Stories 2014 The Young Folks 1940 Go See Eddie 1940 Once a Week Won t Kill You 1944 Published stories Edit The Hang of It 1941 republished in The Kit Book for Soldiers Sailors and Marines 1943 The Heart of a Broken Story 1941 Personal Notes of an Infantryman 1942 The Long Debut of Lois Taggett 1942 republished in Stories The Fiction of the Forties ed Whit Burnett 1949 The Varioni Brothers 1943 Both Parties Concerned 1944 Soft Boiled Sergeant 1944 Last Day of the Last Furlough 1944 Elaine 1945 The Stranger 1945 I m Crazy 1945 A Boy in France 1945 republished in Post Stories 1942 45 ed Ben Hibbs 1946 and July August 2010 issue of Saturday Evening Post magazine reworked from What Babe Saw or Ooh La La 1944 This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise 1945 republished in The Armchair Esquire ed L Rust Hills 1959 Slight Rebellion off Madison 1946 republished in Wonderful Town New York Stories from The New Yorker ed David Remnick 2000 A Young Girl in 1941 with No Waist at All 1947 The Inverted Forest 1947 Blue Melody 1948 A Girl I Knew 1948 republished in Best American Short Stories 1949 ed Martha Foley 1949 Hapworth 16 1924 1965 Unpublished stories Edit The Survivors 1939 The long hotel story 1940 The Fishermen 1941 Lunch for Three 1941 I Went to School with Adolf Hitler 1941 Monologue for a Watery Highball 1941 The Lovely Dead Girl at Table Six 1941 Mrs Hincher 1942 also known as Paula The Kissless Life of Reilly 1942 The Last and Best of the Peter Pans 1942 Holden On the Bus 1942 Men Without Hemingway 1942 Over the Sea Let s Go Twentieth Century Fox 1942 The Broken Children 1943 Paris 1943 Rex Passard on the Planet Mars 1943 Bitsey 1943 What Got Into Curtis in the Woodshed 1944 The Children s Echelon 1944 also known as Total War Diary Boy Standing in Tennessee 1944 The Magic Foxhole 1944 Two Lonely Men 1944 A Young Man in a Stuffed Shirt 1944 The Daughter of the Late Great Man 1945 The Ocean Full of Bowling Balls 1947 Birthday Boy 1946 also known as The Male Goodbye 174 The Boy in the People Shooting Hat 1948 A Summer Accident 1949 Requiem for the Phantom of the Opera 1950 Media portrayals and references EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources J D Salinger news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In W P Kinsella s 1982 novel Shoeless Joe the main character kidnaps the reclusive Salinger to take him to a baseball game When the novel was adapted for cinema as Field of Dreams Salinger s character was replaced by the fictional Terence Mann played by James Earl Jones amid fears that Salinger might sue 175 Sean Connery claimed that Salinger was the inspiration for his role as William Forrester in the 2000 film Finding Forrester 176 In the 2002 film The Good Girl the character of Holden played by Jake Gyllenhaal adopts the name because of his admiration of The Catcher in the Rye The anime TV series Ghost in the Shell Stand Alone Complex heavily references J D Salinger works including Catcher in the Rye The Laughing Man and A Perfect Day for Banana Fish Salinger s name is mentioned in the title for The Wonder Years song You re Not Salinger Get Over It The Catcher in the Rye plays a major part in the South Park episode The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs as the boys are inspired to write their own book when they feel Salinger s book does not live up to its controversial reputation In the film Man at Bath 2010 the character Dustin Segura Suarez holds Franny and Zooey in his hands while taking a bath Salinger is a 2013 documentary film that tells the story of Salinger s life through interviews with friends historians and journalists In the book and TV show You by Caroline Kepnes one of the characters Peach is named as being a relative of Salinger Salinger is portrayed by Chris Cooper in James Steven Sadwith s 2015 film Coming Through the Rye 177 Salinger appears as a character voiced by Alan Arkin in several 2015 2016 episodes of BoJack Horseman season 2 episodes 6 7 8 10 and season 3 episode 1 where he is said to have faked his own death to escape public attention and ironically pursue a career in television production He quotes numerous lines from his works bemoaning how The Catcher in the Rye has become his only recognizable work In humorous contrast to his real life beliefs this rendition of Salinger loves Hollywoo and ends up managing a game show which he aptly names Hollywoo Stars and Celebrities What Do They Know Do They Know Things Let s Find Out Salinger was portrayed by Nicholas Hoult in the 2017 film Rebel in the Rye 178 My Salinger Year is a film directed by Philippe Falardeau released in 2021 based on the 2014 memoir by Joanna Rakoff Notes Edit See Beidler s A Reader s Companion to J D Salinger s The Catcher in the Rye Citations Edit J D Salinger EXPLORING Novels Detroit Gale 2003 Web November 9 2010 verification needed A Perfect Day For Bananafish The New Yorker January 24 1948 Retrieved May 15 2022 J D Salinger Biography Retrieved May 15 2022 a b c d Skow John September 15 1961 Sonny An Introduction Time Archived from the original on October 16 2007 Retrieved April 12 2007 JD Salinger Timeline of Major Events American Masters PBS American Masters January 16 2014 Retrieved December 29 2019 The Genealogy of Richard L Aronoff Aronoff com Archived from the original on April 26 2013 Retrieved February 5 2014 Fiene Donald M 1963 J D Salinger A Bibliography Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature 4 1 109 149 doi 10 2307 1207189 JSTOR 1207189 Skow John September 15 1961 Sonny An Introduction Time Archived from the original on October 16 2007 Retrieved April 12 2007 Slawenski Kenneth February 10 2011 J D Salinger A Life The New York Times a b c d e J D Salinger LitFinder Contemporary Collection Gale 2007 Web November 9 2010 verification needed a b c McGrath Charles January 28 2010 J D Salinger Literary Recluse Dies at 91 The New York Times J D Salinger and the Holocaust Algemeiner com April 17 2014 Retrieved August 13 2014 J D Salinger Jewishvirtuallibrary org January 1 1919 Retrieved January 30 2010 Alexander 1999 p 32 a b c d Lutz 2002 p page needed a b Hathcock Barrett J D Salinger full citation needed verification needed Lutz 2002 p 10 Alexander 1999 p 42 French 1988 p 22 Reiff Raychel Haugrud 2008 J D Salinger Marshall Cavendish ISBN 9780761425946 Fiene Donald M Archived January 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine A Bibliographical Study of J D Salinger Life Work and Reputation M A Thesis University of Louisville 1962 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 39 A Brief Biography of J D Salinger c April 2002 February 2006 by Sarah Morrill French 1988 p xiii a b Alexander 1999 pp 55 58 Alexander 1999 pp 55 63 65 Scovell Jane 1998 Oona Living in the Shadows A Biography of Oona O Neill Chaplin New York Warner p 87 ISBN 0 446 51730 5 a b Sheppard R Z March 23 1988 Trespassers Will Be Prosecuted In Search of J D Salinger by Ian Hamilton Time Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved April 14 2007 a b Lutz 2002 p 18 a b c Yagoda Ben 2000 About Town The New Yorker and the World It Made New York Scribner pp 98 233 ISBN 0 684 81605 9 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 58 Lamb Robert Paul Winter 1996 Hemingway and the creation of twentieth century dialogue American author Ernest Hemingway Twentieth Century Literature Archived from the original reprint on July 9 2012 Retrieved July 10 2007 a b c Baker Carlos 1969 Ernest Hemingway A Life Story New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 420 646 ISBN 0 02 001690 5 a b c Margaret Salinger 2000 p 55 J D Salinger Contemporary Authors Online 2011 n pag Gale Web October 20 2011 verification needed Slawenski K 2011 J D Salinger A Life Random House p 100 Hamilton 1988 p 89 Lutz 2002 p 7 a b c d e Menand Louis October 1 2001 Holden at Fifty The Catcher in the Rye and what it spawned PDF The New Yorker Archived from the original reprint on August 7 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 67 Alexander 1999 p 113 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 359 a b c Alexander 1999 pp 118 20 Alexander 1999 pp 120 164 204 5 Alexander 1999 p 124 Alexander 1999 p 130 a b Crawford 2006 pp 97 99 a b Hamilton 1988 p 75 Fosburgh Lacey November 21 1976 Why More Top Novelists Don t Go Hollywood The New York Times a b c Berg A Scott Goldwyn A Biography New York Alfred A Knopf 1989 ISBN 1 57322 723 4 p 446 a b Depositions Yield J D Salinger Details The New York Times December 12 1986 a b Ross Lillian 2010 The Talk of the Town Remembrance Bearable The New Yorker No February 8 2010 pp 22 23 Alexander 1999 p 142 Salinger J D The Catcher in the Rye New York Little Brown and Company 1951 hi Print page needed a b Whitfield 1997 p 77 Blackstock Alan January 1 1992 J D Salinger Magill s Survey of American Literature 1798 1809 a b Nandel Alan The Significance of Holden Caulfield s Testimony Reprinted in Bloom Harold ed Modern Critical Interpretations J D Salinger s The Catcher in the Rye Philadelphia Chelsea House Publishers 2000 pp 75 89 Crawford 2006 p 4 Burger Nash K July 16 1951 Books of The Times The New York Times Whitfield Stephen J Raise High the Bookshelves Censors book review The Virginia Quarterly Review Spring 2002 Retrieved November 27 2007 In a review of the book in The Christian Science Monitor the reviewer found the book unfit for children to read writing that they would be influenced by Holden as too easily happens when immorality and perversion are recounted by writers of talent whose work is countenanced in the name of art or good intention Hamilton 1988 p 117 a b Hamilton 1988 p 155 J D Salinger Encyclopaedia Britannica Online School ed 2011 Web a b Whitfield 1997 p 97 Whitfield 1997 pp 82 78 Banned from the classroom Censorship and The Catcher in the Rye blogs bl uk Retrieved September 6 2021 Yardley Jonathan October 19 2004 J D Salinger s Holden Caulfield Aging Gracelessly The Washington Post Retrieved November 13 2011 McGunagle Fred Mark David Chapman the Man Who Killed John Lennon Chapter 6 To the Brink and Back Crime Library Court TV Archived from the original on April 7 2004 Gaines James R March 9 1987 Mark Chapman Part III the Killer Takes His Fall People Magazine Vol 27 no 10 Archived from the original on August 13 2018 Retrieved January 14 2020 Crowe Cameron ed Conversations with Wilder New York Alfred A Knopf 1999 ISBN 0 375 40660 3 p 299 PAGE SIX Inside Salinger s Own World New York Post December 4 2003 Retrieved January 18 2007 a b Maynard 1998 p 93 Silverman Al ed The Book of the Month Sixty Years of Books in American Life Boston Little Brown 1986 ISBN 0 316 10119 2 pp 129 130 Hamilton 1988 p 53 Hamilton 1988 p 64 Smith Dominic 2003 Salinger s Nine Stories Fifty Years Later The Antioch Review 61 4 639 649 doi 10 2307 4614550 JSTOR 4614550 Hamilton 1988 p 127 a b Hamilton 1988 p 129 Ranchan Som P 1989 An Adventure in Vedanta J D Salinger s The Glass Family Delhi Ajanta ISBN 81 202 0245 7 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 12 Hamilton 1988 p 92 a b Hamilton 1988 pp 136 7 Leigh Alison January 3 2010 300 East 57th Street Salinger s Last Known Manhattan Home The New York Times Retrieved January 30 2010 a b Crawford 2006 pp 12 14 Lutz 2002 p 30 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 89 a b Margaret Salinger 2000 p 90 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 84 a b c d Margaret Salinger 2000 pp 94 5 Smith Dinitia August 30 2000 Salinger s Daughter s Truths as Mesmerizing as His Fiction The New York Times a b Margaret Salinger 2000 p 195 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 115 a b Margaret Salinger 2000 pp 115 116 Names in the News The Vancouver Sun Vol LXXXII no 38 November 17 1967 p 19 via Newspapers com a b Clarkson Michael November 17 1979 J D Salinger The Catcher in the Rye grows old in solitude The Weekend Herald Vol 97 no 270 pp C1 C6 via Newspapers com Risen Clay June 10 2022 Nancy Clark Reynolds a Player in Reagan s Washington Dies at 94 The New York Times Retrieved June 14 2022 People Time August 4 1961 Retrieved July 10 2007 Lutz 2002 p 35 An Eighteen Year Old Looks Back On Life The New York Times Archived from the original on December 14 2000 Retrieved April 14 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The New York Times a b Alexander Paul February 9 1998 J D Salinger s Women New York Retrieved April 12 2007 Margaret Salinger 2000 pp 361 2 Maynard 1998 p page needed Maynard Joyce April 1 2021 Predatory Men With a Taste for Teenagers Joyce Maynard on the Chilling Parallels Between Woody Allen and J D Salinger Vanity Fair Retrieved June 17 2021 Maynard 1998 p 158 Pollitt Katha September 13 1998 With Love and Squalor The New York Times Retrieved April 14 2007 Fosburgh Lacey November 3 1974 J D Salinger Speaks About His Silence The New York Times Retrieved April 12 2007 a b Maynard 1998 p 97 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 307 JD Salinger s death sparks speculation over unpublished manuscripts The Telegraph January 29 2010 French 1988 p 16 French 1988 p 15 Shane Salerno 2014 Interview of B Eppes in documentary Salinger PBS Retrieved January 21 2014 Eppes Betty 1981 What I Did Last Summer The Paris Review 23 80 That J D Salinger Connection Betty Traxler Eppes Bettytraxlereppes wordpress com April 14 2009 Retrieved February 5 2014 McDowell Edwin September 11 1981 Publishing Visit With J D Salinger The New York Times Butler Brin Jonathan August 2 2021 The Salinger Dilemma Bloomberg Business Week p 68 Alexander Paul February 9 1998 J D Salinger s Women New York Retrieved April 12 2007 The 1998 article mentions that the couple has been married for about ten years Margaret Salinger 2000 p 108 Lutz 2002 p 33 Crawford 2006 p 79 a b Lubasch Arnold H January 30 1987 Salinger Biography Is Blocked The New York Times Sableman Mark November 21 1997 More Speech Not Less Communications Law in the Information Age SIU Press p 265 ISBN 978 0 8093 2135 3 1 Archived March 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b McKinley Jesse November 21 1998 Iranian Film Is Canceled After Protest By Salinger The New York Times Lundegaard Karen M J D Salinger resurfaces in Alexandria Washington Business Journal November 15 1996 Retrieved August 13 2008 Lutz 2002 pp 42 3 Salinger Jerome David 2009 Hapworth 16 1924 Orchises ISBN 978 0 914061 65 6 page needed Hapworth 16 1924 June 19 1965 The New Yorker Paperback The New Yorker January 1965 Retrieved January 29 2010 Sherwell Philip May 30 2009 JD Salinger considers legal action to stop The Catcher in the Rye sequel The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Chan Sewell July 1 2009 Judge Rules for J D Salinger in Catcher Copyright Suit The New York Times Salinger v Colting Salinger v Colting Too Much Borrowing Not Enough Transforming to Constitute Fair Use Article Copyright Law Updates Copyright Legal Updates Lawupdates com Archived from the original on May 13 2010 Retrieved April 4 2010 Appeal Filed to Overturn Ban in Salinger Case Publishers Weekly July 24 2009 Archived from the original on August 7 2009 Retrieved August 28 2009 Judge gives Salinger spinoff dismal review Books guardian co uk The Guardian London Associated Press September 4 2009 Retrieved April 4 2010 Albanese Andrew January 11 2011 J D Salinger Estate Swedish Author Settle Copyright Suit Publishers Weekly Retrieved December 30 2012 Honan William H October 24 1992 Fire Fails To Shake Salinger s Seclusion The New York Times Salinger letters bring 156 500 at auction CNN June 22 1999 Retrieved April 12 2007 Margaret Salinger 2000 p 7 Maynard 1998 p 94 a b c Malcolm Janet June 21 2001 Justice to J D Salinger The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on November 15 2006 J D Salinger 1919 2010 National Portrait Gallery Smithsonia Institution February 1 2010 Retrieved June 30 2017 Italie Hillel January 28 2010 Catcher in the Rye Author J D Salinger Dies ABC News Retrieved January 28 2010 Alison Flood February 1 2019 JD Salinger s unseen writings to be published family confirms The Guardian Retrieved February 1 2019 Meilan Solly February 6 2019 J D Salinger s Unpublished Works Will Be Released to the Public Over the Next Decade Smithsonian SMARTNEWS Retrieved February 7 2019 The author produced a trove of unseen writings over a nearly 50 year period prior to his death in 2010 Whitfield 1997 p 96 Kazin Alfred J D Salinger Everybody s Favorite The Atlantic Monthly 208 2 August 1961 Rpt in Bloom Harold ed edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom 2001 Bloom s BioCritiques J D Salinger Philadelphia Chelsea House ISBN 0 7910 6175 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help pp 67 75 Catcher in the Rye Author J D Salinger Dies Fox News Retrieved February 5 2014 Shuman R Baird ed Great American Writers Twentieth Century Vol 13 New York Marshall Cavendish 2002 14 vols p 1308 a b Mondloch Helen Squalor and Redemption The Age of Salinger The World amp I SIRS Knowledge Source SIRS Renaissance November 2003 Retrieved April 2 2004 Lutz 2002 p 34 Hamilton 1988 pp 105 6 Hamilton 1988 p 188 Brozan Nadine April 27 1991 CHRONICLE The New York Times Osen Diane Interview with John Updike Archived July 3 2018 at the Wayback Machine The National Book Foundation 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Burgess Anthony December 4 1977 WRITERS The New York Times Drabelle Dennis May 20 1984 Playing the Game Of What If The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 20 2017 Howard Gerald October 31 2007 I Was Gordon Lish s Editor Slate ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved June 20 2017 Bender Aimee Holden Schmolden Kotzen Kip and Thomas Beller ed With Love and Squalor 14 Writers Respond to the Work of J D Salinger New York Broadway 2001 ISBN 978 0 7679 0799 6 pp 162 9 Beisch Ann Interview with Stephen Chbosky author of The Perks of Being a Wallflower Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine LA Youth November December 2001 Retrieved July 10 2007 Epstein Jennifer Creative writing program produces aspiring writers Archived January 13 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Daily Princetonian December 6 2004 Retrieved October 30 2008 What Authors Influenced You Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Authorsontheweb com Retrieved July 10 2007 Both Hiaasen and Minot cite him as an influence here You have to trawl the depths The Guardian April 25 2007 Retrieved December 26 2007 Author Bio Archived September 10 2015 at the Wayback Machine Louis Sachar s Official Web Site 2002 Retrieved July 14 2007 Stein Joel The Yips Kotzen Kip and Thomas Beller ed With Love and The Squalor 14 Writers Respond to the Work of J D Salinger New York Broadway 2001 ISBN 978 0 7679 0799 6 pp 170 6 Beam A 2006 J D Salinger Failed Recluse in If you Really Want to Hear About It Writers on J D Salinger and His Work Catherine Crawford ed Thunder s Mouth Press Webster Jason October 23 2014 Sufism a natural antidote to fanaticism The Guardian Retrieved October 23 2014 Abbott Elizabeth 2004 Une histoire des maitresses in French FIDES p 387 ISBN 978 2762124941 Bryan James E 1961 J D Salinger The Fat Lady and the Chicken Sandwich College English 23 3 226 229 doi 10 2307 373014 JSTOR 373014 a b Slawenski Kenneth January 25 2011 J D Salinger A Life Random House Publishing Group p 177 ISBN 978 0 679 60479 2 Reiff 2008 p 131 a b Prigozy Ruth 2009 Bloom Harold ed J D Salinger Bloom s Literary Criticism p 90 ISBN 978 1 4381 1317 3 Library exhibit offers glimpse into Salinger s life and work ABC News October 18 2019 Retrieved April 4 2022 Thalheimer Anne N 2009 Werlock Abby H P ed Companion to Literature Facts on File Companion to the American Short Story Infobase Publishing p 258 ISBN 978 1 4381 2743 9 Miller James E December 3 1965 J D Salinger University of Minnesota Press p 42 ISBN 978 1 4529 1042 0 Romano Andrew November 30 2013 What the Leaked J D Salinger Stories Reveal About the Author The Daily Beast Retrieved April 7 2022 Geddes John January 29 2010 W P on J D Kinsella talks about writing Salinger into Shoeless Joe Maclean s Retrieved September 14 2016 Fleming Mike Jr January 29 2010 Secret J D Salinger Documentary amp Book Now Revealed Mike Has Seen The Film Deadline Hollywood Retrieved April 23 2015 Lee Ashley October 14 2016 Chris Cooper Is J D Salinger in Coming Through the Rye Clip Exclusive Video The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 18 2016 Child Ben September 1 2015 Nicholas Hoult to play JD Salinger in new biopic The Guardian Retrieved January 9 2017 References EditAlexander Paul 1999 Salinger A Biography Los Angeles Renaissance ISBN 1 58063 080 4 Crawford Catherine ed 2006 If You Really Want to Hear About It Writers on J D Salinger and His Work New York Thunder s Mouth ISBN 1 56025 880 2 Grunwald Henry Anatole ed 1962 Salinger the Classic Critical and Personal Portrait New York Harper Perennial Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06185 250 3 French Warren 1988 J D Salinger Revisted Boston Massachusetts Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 7522 6 Hamilton Ian 1988 In Search of J D Salinger New York Random House ISBN 0 394 53468 9 Kubica Chris Hochman Will 2002 Letters to J D Salinger Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 17800 5 Lutz Norma Jean 2002 Biography of J D Salinger In Bloom Harold ed J D Salinger Bloom s BioCritiques Philadelphia Chelsea House pp 3 44 ISBN 0 7910 6175 2 OCLC 48473975 Maynard Joyce 1998 At Home in the World New York Picador ISBN 0 312 19556 7 Mueller Bruce F Hochman Will 2011 Critical Companion to J D Salinger a Literary Reference to His Life and Work New York Facts on File ISBN 978 0816065974 Salinger Margaret 2000 Dream Catcher A Memoir New York Washington Square Press ISBN 0 671 04281 5 Slawenski Kenneth 2010 J D Salinger A Life Raised High London Pomona Books ISBN 978 1 904590 23 1 Whitfield Stephen December 1997 Cherished and Cursed Toward a Social History of The Catcher in the Rye PDF The New England Quarterly 70 4 567 600 doi 10 2307 366646 JSTOR 366646 Archived from the original PDF on September 12 2012 Retrieved November 2 2012 Reprinted in Bloom Harold ed 2001 J D Salinger Bloom s BioCritiques Philadelphia Chelsea House pp 77 105 ISBN 0 7910 6175 2 dd External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jerome David Salinger Wikiquote has quotations related to J D Salinger McGrath Charles January 28 2010 J D Salinger Literary Recluse Dies at 91 The New York Times The Reclusive Writer Inspired a Generation Baltimore Sun January 29 2010 JD Salinger Daily Telegraph obituary Obituary JD Salinger BBC News January 28 2010 J D Salinger 1919 2010 An appreciation World Socialist Web Site February 2 2010 Implied meanings in J D Salinger stories and reverting Dead Caulfields The Life and Work of J D Salinger Catching Salinger Serialized documentary about the search for J D Salinger J D Salinger Archived June 1 2019 at the Wayback Machine biography quotes multimedia teacher resources On J D Salinger by Michael Greenberg from The New York Review of Books Essay on Salinger s life from Haaretz Works by J D Salinger at Open Library J D Salinger Hartog Letters University of East Anglia Salinger and Catcher in the Rye Archived January 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine slideshow by Life magazine The Man in the Glass House Ron Rosenbaum s 1997 profile for Esquire J D Salinger at IMDb J D Salinger at Library of Congress Authorities with 18 catalog records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J D Salinger amp oldid 1136134177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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