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J.D. Salinger Dead: 'Catcher in the Rye' Author Dies At 91

HILLEL ITALIE   01/28/10 09:30 PM ET   AP

J D Salinger

NEW YORK — So what about the safe? The death this week of J.D. Salinger ends one of literature's most mysterious lives and intensifies one of its greatest mysteries: Was the author of "The Catcher in the Rye" keeping a stack of finished, unpublished manuscripts in a safe in his house in Cornish, N.H? Are they masterpieces, curiosities or random scribbles?

And if there are publishable works, will the author's estate release them?

The Salinger camp isn't talking.

No comment, says his literary representative, Phyllis Westberg, of Harold Ober Associates Inc.

No plans for any new Salinger books, reports his publisher, Little, Brown & Co.

Marcia B. Paul, an attorney for Salinger when the author sued last year to stop publication of a "Catcher" sequel, would not get on the phone Thursday.

His son, Matt Salinger, referred questions about the safe to Westberg.

Stories about a possible Salinger trove have been around for a long time. In 1999, New Hampshire neighbor Jerry Burt said the author had told him years earlier that he had written at least 15 unpublished books kept locked in a safe at his home. A year earlier, author and former Salinger girlfriend Joyce Maynard had written that Salinger used to write daily and had at least two novels stored away.

Salinger, who died Wednesday at age 91, began publishing short stories in the 1940s and became a sensation in the 1950s after the release of "Catcher," a novel that helped drive the already wary author into near-total seclusion. His last book, "Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour," came out in 1963 and his last published work of any kind, the short story "Hapworth 16, 1924," appeared in The New Yorker in 1965.

Jay McInerney, a young star in the 1980s thanks to the novel "Bright Lights, Big City," is not a fan of Hapworth and skeptical about the contents of the safe.

"I think there's probably a lot in there, but I'm not sure if it's necessarily what we hope it is," McInerney said Thursday. "`Hapworth' was not a traditional or terribly satisfying work of fiction. It was an insane epistolary monologue, virtually shapeless and formless. I have a feeling that his later work is in that vein."

Author-editor Gordon Lish, who in the 1970s wrote an anonymous story that convinced some readers it was a Salinger original, said he was "certain" that good work was locked up in Cornish. Novelist Curtis Sittenfeld, frequently compared to Salinger because of her novel "Prep," was simply enjoying the adventure.

"I can't wait to find out!" she said. "In our age of shameless self-promotion, it's extraordinary, and kind of great, to think of someone really and truly writing for writing's sake."

Some of the great works of literature have been published after the author's death, and even against the author's will, including such Franz Kafka novels as "The Trial" and "The Castle," which Kafka had requested be destroyed.

Because so little is known about what Salinger was doing, it's so easy to guess. McInernay said he has an old girlfriend who met Salinger and was told that the author was mostly writing about health and nutrition. Lish said Salinger told him back in the 1960s that he was still writing about the Glass family, featured in much of Salinger's work.

But the Salinger papers might exist only in our dreams, like the second volume of Nikolai Gogol's "Dead Souls," which the Russian author burned near the end of his life. The Salinger safe also could turn into a version of Henry James' novella "The Aspern Papers," in which the narrator's pursuit of a late poet's letters ends with his being told that they were destroyed.

Margaret Salinger, the author's daughter, wrote in a memoir published in 2000 that J.D. Salinger had a precise filing system for his papers: A red mark meant the book could be released "as is," should the author die. A blue mark meant that the manuscript had to be edited.

"There is a marvelous peace in not publishing," J.D. Salinger told The New York Times in 1974. "Publishing is a terrible invasion of my privacy. I like to write. I love to write. But I write just for myself and my own pleasure."

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04:02 PM on 01/29/2010
hahah, I hated this book!
11:21 PM on 01/29/2010
Do you think anyone cares?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
10:54 AM on 02/09/2010
I wasn't crazy about it either. It was curriculum in my middle school.

It's probably supposed to be a book passed around spontaneou­sly among depressed school kids.

Once it's made into curriculum­, it loses it's impact. I bet J.D. Salinger would have been aghast if he knew our teacher made us read it.

Sometime I may read it with a fresh perspectiv­e and I'll actually enjoy it. But it was too heavy for me. Since I was already embedded in the "counter culture", this kind of content didn't have much effect on me. Like Pink Floyd, it was more likely to cause depression than to help me get past it.
12:46 PM on 01/29/2010
I give TCITR high marks for its emotional honesty, but rather than identifyin­g with Holden Caulfeid, I have taken great pains in my life to not become like him or its author.

Thank you JD Salinger for the roadmap of how NOT to live a life.
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12:30 PM on 01/29/2010
My dream is to write a bestseller classic, then go on my merry way.

Salinger had it right.

(Though I'm still puzzled at how big he apparently was having only one major piece of work to his name. Still I'm fascinated­.)
12:31 PM on 01/29/2010
His Glass family cycle, and especially NINE STORIES, are nothing to sneeze at.
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JBS
Part time misanthrope & full time curmudgeon
08:28 PM on 01/31/2010
Don't matter. I had enough of his crap shoved down my throat in high school to sour me on his writing for the rest of my life.
12:24 PM on 01/29/2010
Great NPR/StoryC­orps broadcast today--tho­se goddamn fan-phony pilgrimage­s. http://bit­.ly/dkk6iq

Rain-soake­d in hermit-aut­hor's kitchen, wow. Can't imagine doing it myself but then, the man's inspired crazier tribute.
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24hourrifle
A time comes when silence is betrayal
10:40 AM on 01/29/2010
i wont suggest that salinger wasnt talented,a­nd that CITR wasnt a great piece of fiction.bu­t that doesnt change the fact that he/the book are both wildly overrated.­...
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ultrabop
former Boyscout gone bad
12:09 PM on 01/29/2010
Don't discount the fact that he was kind of the Andy Warhol of pop writing. He taught us that we don't have to write about anything, but that, in itself, is a statement. He backed it up by not publishing for the rest of his life.
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jones
Dances with Weims
08:44 AM on 01/29/2010
CITR has many memories for me:
- A former boyfriend telling me about how he felt like holden caulfield alot of times.
- The part of the book where one of the boys f*%ts so loudly "he almost blew the roof off".
- I was surprised to learn as a teenager that my mother had read it and found it funny....I was a serious little kid.
- The descriptio­n of the lumpy hand knit sweaters one of Holden's girlfreind­s wore.
- Mark David Chapman's lonely obscession with Holden while I sat shocked at the violence of Lennon's death.
- Holden's lonely wondering through NYC streets...­. I've done that too recently wondering what I was doing there and remembered the book.

Maybe its not my favorite book but it was one I always will remember.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
harpo73
08:01 AM on 01/29/2010
C.I.T.R is definatley one of the top ten American books.

Rest in Peace
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24hourrifle
A time comes when silence is betrayal
10:47 AM on 01/29/2010
i would say not even top 100...im not simply trying to be disagreeab­le or negative just for the sake of being so,i just have found so many novels from that era,and especially earlier that were so much more revolution­ary,ground­breaking,a­nd frankly,we­ll written...­.

carson mcCullers

dalton trumbo

upton sinclair
01:01 PM on 01/29/2010
If you're talking short stories, you can begin with Hemingway, then go on to Flannery O'Conner, two masters of the form.

Salinger's Nine Stories rank quite high, indeed.
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spilkus
I'm in the art world, for Pete's sake.
02:37 AM on 01/30/2010
I can't imagine wanting to use the death of one who touched so many in such a profound way as a forum to give your mundane opinions on who's slightly better at writing in your judgement.
We read Catcher in the Rye when we were just old enough to want to cling to our childish innocence and mature enough to regret our missed chances, and wish we could go back and not face the adult world.

If you didn't get it, why advertise the fact?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ultrabop
former Boyscout gone bad
12:03 PM on 01/29/2010
I agree completely­.

It disappoint­ed me when I read it again as an adult, but the first read, especially if you are a youngster feeling kind of outcast in your town or school, it connects like a rod of lightning. You figure, thank God I'm not alone!!! Somebody out there gets it!

My 17 year old son read it and didn't like it. He thought Holden was self-obses­sed and shallow.

My son didn't grow up in a small town in the 50's however.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDogBear
07:09 PM on 01/29/2010
I don't know. I also think Holden was self-obses­sed and shallow and I grew up in a small town in the 60's. I think people are underestim­ating how racy the book was considered when it was published. Things that to us seem like nothing, he doesn't respect his teachers, he talks to a prostitute­, were considered scandalous at the time. I think that much of the reputation for CITR was due to the ridiculous attempts at censorship­. It gave the book a lot of buzz and advocacy simply because the censorship was so petty and contrary to real American values of free speech.
07:48 AM on 01/29/2010
the only thing worse than a man in the depths of an ether binge is a j.d. slainger fan mourning his death.
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spilkus
I'm in the art world, for Pete's sake.
03:14 AM on 01/30/2010
After reading many of your comments I must ask you: Are you available in capsule or tablet for those nights when I really need a good night's sleep?
07:12 AM on 01/29/2010
Such a narcissist but that is typical of baby boomers. MEMEMEMEME­MEME "I just write for my own self and my own pleasure" Riiiiight.

Yep these are the people that brought us the sociopathi­c myspace generation and "just say no to everything we did".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blacksmithn
Iron, cold iron, is master of them all...
12:45 PM on 01/29/2010
Umm, Salinger wasn't a Baby Boomer. He served in WWII. Arguably, his children may be considered Baby Boomers.

But enough messy facts, continue with your rant...
01:05 PM on 01/29/2010
Do you ever post anything that does not include the term 'baby boomers'?

It appears you have some serious inter-gene­rational issues, not to mention that it became quite uninterest­ing the first ten times you mentioned it.
06:38 AM on 01/29/2010
You really missed the boat here, folks! You're praising a guy who wrote ONE BOOK and I've hardly heard a word about Howard Zinn, who died yesterday, who changed the way America sees its history. Shame on you!
06:43 AM on 01/29/2010
Salinger wrote four books. I know how pesky those facts can be.

And if you've hardly heard a word about Howard Zinn, then you must be hard of hearing. There were several posts on this blog, and many others elsewhere.

And as for lauding an author who wrote only one book, let me remind you of Harper Lee and "To Kill a Mockingbir­d." It's quality, not quantity, that matters.
09:04 AM on 01/29/2010
There has been plenty said about Howard Zinn, though you probably won't find it in an article about JD Salinger. Additional­ly, he wrote four books, not that it matters. Cather in the Rye is one of the most important books in American Literature­, I think it's author's passing is worth noting.
06:35 AM on 01/29/2010
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BRILLIANCE HAS BEEN LOST TODAY ...BUT SHALL ALWAYS BE REMEMBERED .







RIP FRIEND
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SpaceboySD
"Free To Be You And Me" Is My Bible
06:37 AM on 01/29/2010
Hilarious. No one spins it like The Onion... Thanks for the link.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SpaceboySD
"Free To Be You And Me" Is My Bible
07:12 AM on 01/29/2010
I know, The Onion is sublime. I don't want to sound like I'm making fun either. It's just when I read this on there this morning I almost spit my coffee all over my laptop.
06:16 AM on 01/29/2010
when alice walker and maya angelou die, i shall come to the board and be able to tell of the meaning and impact the color purple and i know why the caged bird sings had on my life and my perspectiv­e. i will be able to talk of how these books and the times in which they were set and the informatio­n they conveyed expanded my knowledge of the entire world at that time. i shall be able to wax poetic on the inventiven­ess in which the informatio­n is conveyed. how i was drawn into a world so totally unlike my own and yet.......

the sheer joy of the prose and the art of story telling.

i am a white 52 year old male with a.u.t.i.s.­m.

that folks, is literature­.
05:54 AM on 01/29/2010
Why are people (and I use the term loosely) coming onto this site just to disparage Salinger? Go away. There's a time and a place for literary criticism, but this site at this time isn't it. Besides, judging from what I'm reading, it doesn't appear that anyone has anything other than opinions to offer. I'm not reading any astounding­ly insightful literary analyses a la Trilling or Frye or Eagleton.

Salinger's work touched a great many readers. The fact that it didn't touch you doesn't really matter. Would you go to the funeral of a relative and climb onto the casket and shout to everyone that you never really cared for Uncle Joe or Aunt Polly? Or interrupt the eulogy to exclaim that you really liked Aunt Minerva a lot better?
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Hillrick
...wheel to the storm and fly!
08:51 AM on 01/29/2010
Some do seem to find the most inappropri­ate times to exercise their wit.
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Fritzwood
en vino veritas
11:32 AM on 01/29/2010
amen...
01:09 PM on 01/29/2010
You didn't like Aunt Polly?
05:47 AM on 01/29/2010
Who is still waiting for The Great American Novel?

It's already been written by Saliinger. THE CATCHER IN THE RYE.

It comes right before Moby Dick..
01:10 PM on 01/29/2010
De gustibus non est disputandu­m!