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About this Book

Mass Market Paperbound

208 Pages, 4.19 x 6.75 x 0.56 IN

May 1, 1991

Little, Brown and Company US


0316769509
9780316769501

From Our Editors

A collection of nine classic Salinger short stories.

From the Publisher

Stories: A Perfect Day for Bananafish, Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut, Just Before the War with the Eskimos, The Laughing Man, Down at the Dinghy, For Esme -- With Love and Squalor, Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes, De Daumier-Smith''s Blue Period, and Teddy.

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.

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From The Community

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4

Reviews from the Community5 Reviews

  • Saro

    Saro

    • 1 person found this helpful

    Minor but still worth the trip 4

    2 years ago

    Nine Stories has all the undertones of that classic Salinger off-beat, retro stamp and it is often overshadowed by A Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey despite being a small masterpiece in its own right, but I was apprehensive about picking up the short story collection all the same. It is rather silly to hold on to a writer’s more established and acclaimed work and not venture out to slightly unchartered territory specially when this reader realized that it was not quite unchartered… read more

  • Anita

    Anita

    • 1 person found this helpful

    Awesome book 5

    6 years ago

    These short stories were very interesting and I found them to capture my attention to the fullest. read more

  • Catherine

    Catherine

    9 Big Yawns 1

    6 years ago

    J.D. Salinger's 'Catcher In the Rye' made him famous - which is a good thing, because his short stories would have gotten him nowhere fast. The only remarkable thing about these nine tales is their utter lack of interest, both character and plotwise. Reading J.D. Salinger's short fiction generates about as much excitement and satisfaction as would the observation of sea barnacles. If you enjoy short stories, do yourself a favour: do not read this book. read more

  • Ray Garraty

    Ray Garraty

    • 2 people found this helpful

    Sweet 4

    9 years ago

    Every bit as enjoyable as Catcher in the Rye. Shorter works with the same kind of impact. You want the stories to just go on. Them not to have an end. When reading anything Salinger has written I am filled with an unusual mixture of wonder, sadness, sweetness and honesty. Catcher is merely the sequel. This book is worth the read. Really. I'm not kidding.

  • Alison

    Alison

    • 1 person found this helpful

    Bananafish! 3

    10 years ago

    Although the stories are not up to the standard as "Catcher in The Rye", these stories should not remain overlooked. The first story expands on the life of Seymour Glass, using a different point of view. Also enjoyable was the story about a young genius. A lighter Salinger read.

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