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About this Book

Mass Market Paperbound

0 Pages, 1 x 1 x 1 in

August 8, 1993

Little, Brown & Company


0316777900
9780316777902

About the Author

More than 20 years of seclusion and silence have taken their toll on J. D. Salinger's literary reputation, but the impact made by The Catcher in The Rye (1951) and the Glass family stories was deep enough to make a lasting impression and to assure his continued readership. Salinger was born in New York City of Jewish and Scottish-Irish extraction. He attended Manhattan public schools, a military academy in Pennsylvania, and three colleges, but received no degrees. "A happy tourist's year in Europe," he wrote in 1955, "when I was eighteen and nineteen. In the Army from '42 to '46, most of the time with the Fourth Division. . . . I've been writing since I was fifteen or so. My short stories have appeared in a number of magazines over the last ten years, mostly---and most happily---in the New Yorker. I worked on "The "Catcher in the Rye,' on and off, for ten years" (Twentieth Century Authors). "Remarkable and absorb-ing . . . profoundly moving . . . magic," Harrison Smith called this story. The Catcher has been an extremely popular book among young people ever since its appearance and has brought Salinger an international reputation. Franny and Zooey (1961) is composed of two long New Yorker stories, which appeared in 1955 and 1957, recording a significant weekend in the lives of Franny Glass, a troubled 20-year-old college student, and her brother Zooey, a television actor. Raise High the Roof Beam, (1963) is another story of the Glass family. There are seven Glass children, "two of whom are now dead and all of whom were child prodigies." Salinger gradually withdrew from public life and the literary scene during the 1950s. He had discovered Zen during his days in Greenwich Village after the war, and that philosophy may have encouraged his deeper immersion in meditation and writing. Unfortunately, however, Salinger's withdrawal has not led to increased creativity---at least not visibly. As of 1992, his years of seclusion since 1963 had produced only silence, and his critical reputation, which peaked in the early 1960s, has suffered accordingly. The Catcher in the Rye, however, remains a standard text in high school and college classrooms, and a loyal following of readers continues to hope for a continuation of the Glass family saga. They feel that, when and if that work is completed, it will be one of the masterworks of twentieth-century fiction. Salinger now lives a somewhat reclusive life in Cornish, New Hampshire, where he may still be writing. He has occasionally been involved in lawsuits concerning unauthorized use of his writings.

Other Editions

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Hardcover $31.99 $21.11
Trade Paperback $15.50 $12.40
Mass Market Paperbound $8.50 $8.50

From The Community

Who's Listing it as a Top TenWhat's this?

This title has appeared in 5 Top Ten lists. See the most recent lists below:

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This title has been mentioned in 3 blogs. See the most recent posts below:

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Reviews from the Community7 Reviews

  • Saro

    Saro

    Unveiling and unfolding 4

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Mass Market Paperbound)

    2 years ago

    Franny and Zooey, originally published in New Yorker magazine as two distinct short stories, consists of two more or less loosely connected stories concerning the spiritual unraveling and emotional upheavals of college student Franny Glass in 50s New York. Both stories are part of an ever growing non-linear saga about the quirky, artistic, and manical Glass family whom discerning readers may recall meeting in A Perfect Day for Bananafish (1948), Raise High the Roofbeams, Carpenters (1955), and… read more

  • DLY

    DLY

    Extremely Profound. 4

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Hardcover)

    12 months ago

    For those of you who LOVED Catcher in the Rye, this book was not up to par by those standards, yet, a great read. Franny & Zooey was a novel about the relationship between a brother and sister Franny (sister) and Zooey (actually Zachary, brother) They were born into fame because of their older siblings status on the radio show "It's a Wise Child" - they blamed their past and their older siblings for their strange outlooks and perspectives on everything. This novel felt more like a short story… read more

  • Anonymous

    Anonymous

    Meh. 2

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Mass Market Paperbound)

    4 years ago

    I first read this book fresh off of falling in love with Catcher in the Rye. I read 'Franny' and enjoyed it. An interesting short story. (3.5 stars I guess) But I just couldn't get through 'Zooey'. I finally managed several years later and it was not worth it. I just found that it dragged too much. It could've easily been 50 pages shorter. I would say if you haven't gotten into it after the first 10 pages, give up!

  • Rachael

    Rachael

    Very Dissapointed 2

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Mass Market Paperbound)

    5 years ago

    After reading the customer reviews i was very eager to read this novel but felt it was absolutly terrible... nothing caught my interest at all it was worse than catcher in the rye! read more

  • stephanie

    stephanie

    • 1 person found this helpful

    AMAZING 5

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Mass Market Paperbound)

    5 years ago

    this book is a must read. i don't even know how to describe it. I tell everyone i know to read it, because i couldn't put it down. and when i finished reading it, the feelings and thought just stayed with me. it's my favourite book. i know it sounds cheesy, but it seriously made me smile on the inside. if you thought the catcher in the rye was depressing this is the opposite, it fills you with hope, in a very real way - a way that only Salinger could achieve! so good. just so good. read more

  • Matthew Fraser

    Matthew Fraser

    Dig deep. 5

    This review is from: Franny And Zooey (Mass Market Paperbound)

    9 years ago

    I don't feel qualified in the first place to write a review for such an author, but I will simply suggest that people should read this book. An excellent story with an ending that left me feeling almost as relieved and uplifted and as high as Franny. It's the kind of book that stays on your mind for days after you've closed it, then forces you to re-read it several times. Profound truth is embedded here.

see all 7 reviews

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