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J. D. Salinger: A Life
J. D. Salinger: A Life
J. D. Salinger: A Life
Audiobook19 hours

J. D. Salinger: A Life

Written by Kenneth Slawenski

Narrated by Norman Dietz

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

One of the most popular and mysterious figures in American literary history, J. D. Salinger eluded fans and journalists for most of his life. Now comes a new biography that Peter Ackroyd in the Times of London calls "energetic and magnificently researched"-a book from which "a true picture of Salinger emerges." Filled with new information and revelations garnered from countless interviews, letters, and public records, J. D. Salinger: A Life presents an extraordinary life that spanned nearly the entire twentieth century.

Kenneth Slawenski explores Salinger's privileged youth, long obscured by misrepresentation and rumor, revealing the brilliant, sarcastic, vulnerable son of a disapproving father and doting mother and his entrance into a social world where Gloria Vanderbilt dismissively referred to him as "a Jewish boy from New York." Here too are accounts of Salinger's first broken heart-Eugene O'Neill's daughter, Oona, left him for the much older Charlie Chaplin-and the devastating World War II service of which he never spoke, and which haunted him forever.

J. D. Salinger features all the dazzle of this author's early writing successes, his dramatic encounters with luminaries from Ernest Hemingway to Laurence Olivier to Elia Kazan, his surprising office intrigues with famous New Yorker editors and writers, and the stunning triumph of The Catcher in the Rye, which would both make him world-famous and hasten his retreat into the hills of New Hampshire.

Whether it's revealing the facts of his hasty, short-lived first marriage or his lifelong commitment to Eastern religion, which would dictate his attitudes toward sex, nutrition, solitude, and creativity, J. D. Salinger is this unique author's unforgettable story in full-one that no lover of literature can afford to miss.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 31, 2011
ISBN9781452671529
J. D. Salinger: A Life

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Rating: 3.607142952380952 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

42 ratings8 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kenneth Slawenski presents life events and artistic productions in a way that is consistent with J. D. Salinger’s idea that the writer should not get between the work and the reader’s experience. Slawenski does not attempt to reduce the creativity of the short stories, novellas, and novel by making amateur psychiatric interpretation of the relationship between the author’s personality and his publications. Slawenski makes connections in time: what Salinger was doing in school, in the Army, and in his social interactions and what he wrote during those times. The biography clearly separates Salinger’s experiences and memories from his imagination. For example, a short story about war is very different from Salinger’s specific memories of the battles in Hurtgen Forest, more emotionally powerful and less susceptible to rationality.The increasing spirituality of Salinger described in the book as he developed as a person and an artist is embedded in his stories not explained by them. It is interesting that spirituality and creativity actually increased Salinger’s reclusiveness leaving what he considered to be almost perfect art as the communication between his readers and himself. Readers could be greatly affected by the art but not the man, his imagination not his personal thoughts and behaviors. When fans and journalists attempted to break through the lines of his work seeking the mystical man behind them, Salinger deliberately disillusioned them about himself and his characters with his final published work, Hapworth 16, 1924.World War II greatly affected Salinger. He came ashore at Normandy on D-Day and served in the deadly battles in Hurtgen Forest embedded with the 4th Infantry Division. Most men in the division died, but Salinger managed to walk out of the combat area with the survivors. The important information here is that Salinger was protected because of his role in the Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC). His job was to find, arrest, and interrogate soldiers in his unit who were subversive to the war effort. Also, he was valuable as a CIC sergeant because of his language skills and training in interrogating suspected Nazis living secretly in Division captured areas. He certainly saw mayhem and experienced the constant fear of impending death in the 4th Division, but without the same level of fighting risk as his fellow combat infantrymen. He had the opportunity to observe the emotions and motives of people who were experiencing extreme stress.Slawenski’s excellent biography indicates that there are personal letters and many pages of personal writing produced after Hapworth that were never meant for publication. As with his acquaintance Ernest Hemingway, perhaps such personal writing will be published and ultimately read by many a suitable period after his death. I read such letters and work of EH and I probably will do the same with the secret writing of JDS.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Very interesting!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Considering the extent to which J.D. Salinger withdrew from the public eye and guarded his privacy for most of his life, much is known about him, as Kenneth Slawenski proves in his 2010 biography “J.D. Salinger: A Life.”Salinger wasn't always so withdrawn. As a young man he was popular with women and someone who went out for a drink with the guys. Slawenski identifies several factors that eventually led to his isolation in Cornish, N.H., and his decision to continue writing but to cease publishing his work. His experiences in Europe during World War II affected him greatly. He wasn't the only veteran who pulled back within himself after the war ended. Even on the front lines, Salinger worked on his short stories, and many of his stories, including "For Esme — With Love and Squalor," were heavily influenced by the war.Then there was the The New Yorker, which for several years exclusively published his stories. The magazine has long emphasized the importance of the story over its author, something Salinger took to heart. Removing his photograph from “The Catcher in the Rye” in later editions was just one way he attempted to make himself secondary to his work.Eventually he carried this to the extreme by writing his stories but then hiding them away. This decision was fueled by his devotion to Zen Buddhism and meditation. Prayer, Slawenski writes, became his primary ambition. The popularity of his books provided him with enough income to live on and support his family, but as a virtual hermit, especially after his wife (the second of three and the mother of his children) left him, he didn't need much money.Yet for someone who tried to put his work ahead of himself, Salinger couldn't stop putting himself and his beliefs front and center in that work. His characters, from Holden Caulfield to Buddy Glass, speak for him, thus giving a biographer plenty to work with. Slawenski discusses in detail every published story. Many of these stories Salinger refused to have reprinted and thus are difficult for fans to find.The writer's life intersected with those of other famous people in surprising ways. Salinger's first love, the daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill, married Charlie Chaplin instead, During the war, Salinger would sometimes slip away to compare notes about writing with war correspondent Ernest Hemingway. His best friend in Cornish was the esteemed Judge Learned Hand. Jackie Kennedy once called him on the phone, trying to persuade him to come to the White House.The irony of Salinger's withdrawal from the world is that it made him, not his fiction, the public's primary focus. Any Salinger sighting became news.Salinger died just as Slawenski was wrapping up this biography. This was fortunate for the biographer in that it allowed him to tell a more complete story, but it also saved him, an obvious Salinger fan, from becoming another Salinger enemy, yet another person invading the privacy of someone who had had enough of fame and just wanted to be left alone.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Billed as a biography this is so much more as the author uses extensive information about the writings and interweaves Salinger's works with his life. When I retire I will re-read my beloved Salinger in conjunction with this book!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Average biography of a very reclusive figure. Has to really stretch in order to get some details.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Considering that Slawenski is an official fan and has run a Salinger fan site for years, it's better than expected. Funny thing, tho: I haven't closely followed Salinger news and haven't read the short stories or even Catcher in many years, yet there is very little new that I learned about Salinger's life from this book.More than ten years ago, I read Ian Hamilton's book, so I recalled the essentials of his childhood. Slawenski fails to explain that while he heavily relies on Salinger letters--not that there are anywhere near enough footnotes--he can't quote extensively. Of course Hamilton explains that issue well because Salinger prevented initial publication and brought the publisher to court--leading to a groundbreaking copyright case; the resulting ruling: an author owns the copyright to his or her own letters. Yes, even when the recipients had deposited or sold letters to libraries. So Hamilton had to rewrite, paraphrasing and summarizing formerly quoted material.Second source: I had read Peggy Salinger's book, Dreamcatcher, a few years ago. Hadn't read Maynard's memoir but it got enough coverage that I think I know the salient details.Signs of fandom: Slawenski never mentions Peggy's book in the text (tho some of the footnotes lead to it) and her and her actor brother's post-childhood gets about one sentence. Even Matthew's acting career isn't mentioned. Similarly, just a few sentences about the Maynard interlude in Salinger's late middle age. Perhaps the pursuit of an 18 year-old virgin college freshman needs a little examination? Perhaps something of the substance of her NYT article that caught Salinger's attention? That she was still a virgin when she left Salinger after a few months or years? Peggy's memories of the slightly older Joyce? Nothing either about ex-wife Claire's period as a "Mrs. Robinson" while finally getting a degree at Dartmouth, as told by Peggy.While I already knew from Peggy's book that Salinger had an especially gruesome war, Slawenski fills in some blanks. Whew: from D Day through the Battle of the Bulge: a straight year of horror. "During June 1944, the 12th Infantry Regiment lost 76 percent of its officers and 63 percent of its enlisted men." No wonder he had post-traumatic stress. And of course it illuminates Salinger's obsession with the innocence of childhood.I don't suppose Slawenski devotes more than 20 pages to WW2 and the earlier year in Europe but it does add something. Slawenski's belief that Salinger probably hasn't written about his combat experiences seems about right. It does seem that there are/were still stories from that period about peripheral experiences. It is tempting to think about stories inspired by JDS's year, 1938, in Poland and Austria. There is an uncollected story (used to be on line), A Girl I Once Knew, that was inspired by Jewish girl and her family that he lived with in Vienna; they all perished.We also learn a little more about Sylvia, the German woman Salinger was briefly married to and even brought home. (Despite Salinger's job as a German and French interrogator of suspected Nazis, collaborators, etc., rumors that Syvia was such a suspect don't appear to bear addressing.). An opthamologist, she eventually emigrated to Michigan and died a few years ago. Did Slawenski or anyone else ever attempt to interview her? How was she even "discovered"? That's the kind of detail Slawenski omits. Come to think of it, I don't think he has any primary sources but is diligent about tracking down all the secondary ones, like records of Salinger's regiment.The Sylvia subject brings me to Peggy's book and why fans shouldn't write bios. You need some pretense of non-partisanship--that you can admire someone's work and still acknowledge severe flaws. Peggy is no literary writer. I'm not sure she had even read much of her father's work. Once picking up mail at the post office with her father, there was a letter from Sylvia: Salinger threw it away w/o reading it, explaining to young Peggy that when he was done with someone, he was done, Peggy says. She knew that would be true of her relationship with her father once Dreamcatcher was published: He would never speak to her again. In her 20s, working a blue-collar job, married to a karate instructor (a black guy, fwiw) ... she really had to make it on her own. Her father didn't believe in paying for college, she says. Slawenski notes, as Peggy did, that upon divorce her mother got $8,000 a year in alimony and, perhaps,a little additional child support. $8,000 even in the late 1960s?! Doesn't that suggest a skinflint? A vindictive man?A better biography would point out the contrast with Salinger's supposedly life-long dedication to Vedanta. Where is the compassion? Peggy gave the impression that her father's spiritual pursuits changed over time. (Seems to me that neighbors recalled Salinger showing up for a public meat-eating event.) There should be more about Vedanta and Buddhism and how these beliefs permeate Nine Stories and the final published ones, but there is something to go on here. I will look at Nine Stories anew and perhaps even Raise High the Roofbeam, Carpenters.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow! This bio really grabbed me. I wasn't sure if I'd like it, because I generally prefer memoirs, which are so much more personal. Biographies are often too much the opposite - impersonal, scholarly, cold. But in the absence of a memoir from the always reclusive and now departed Salinger, I found Slawenski's biography to be the next best thing. Because Slawenski made it personal, warm, empathetic. There is certainly no doubt that he has been an avid fan of Salinger for most of his life. And fan-dom runs the obvious risk of getting in the way of effective biography-writing. And I'm not sure even Slawenski himself would argue that his treatment of Salinger is completely objective. Because it's not. The NY Times review of the book called it "reverent," which may be a bit too strong. I'd call it respectful.I know there have been quite a few other biographies and critical studies written on Salinger and his work. Slawenski has probably read all of them, and cites several in his own book. But this is the first real bio of Salinger I've read, and I absolutely loved it, probably because the book comes across as a real labor of love. Whenever a writer is truly passionate about his subject, I think it adds something. I know others have called J.D. SALINGER: A LIFE "hagiography." But Salinger was no saint. I know that. (I've read the Maynard memoir, as well as Peggy Salinger's DREAM CATCHER, a memoir with plenty of unflattering dirt about her famous father.) And so does Slawenski. But his respect for the man and his work come through clearly. Slawenski has said he worked on the book for nearly eight years - while Salinger was still very much alive. Perhaps he was hoping, even if only subconsciously, for some sign of tacit approval from the famous recluse. Considering Salinger's litiginous reactions to previous biographies and books about him, it seems highly unlikely. In any case, Salinger died about the same time Slawenski's book was published.Here are some of the things I really liked about the Slawenski bio. (1) The blow-by-blow accounts of Salinger's early attempts at fiction, as well as the detailed summaries of a couple dozen of the early uncollected stories, as well as mentions of other stories that were apparently lost. (2) The detailed tracing of Salinger's wartime experiences. (3) The astute and careful analyses of the books. CATCHER IN THE RYE I didn't need too much on, but those later ones about the oh-so-precocious Glass children were another matter entirely. I did read those books, but I never claimed to actually "get" what they were all about. Slawenski etrapolates them all and also gives an in-depth look at Salinger's nearly life-long fascination with Easter mysticism and philosophies. Stuff that made him, in the eyes of many, well, weird. I remember a grad school assignment back in 1970 of finding and reading "Hapworth 16, 1924." Well, I really did read the whole thing, but I can't say I liked it, or understood what Salinger was driving at. And I kinda got the impression even Slawenski - devoted fan that he is - was a bit flummoxed by that last work. He commented that even the critics pretty much ignored it when it was first published in The New Yorker. The thing is, I appreciated the way Slawenski did do the research and did explain what Salinger seemed to be saying in all those less-understandable pieces. And (4) he brought me back to Holden Caulfield again. Yes, I reread CATCHER yet again, while I was reading the bio. The two books make great bedfellows. Like millions of other people, I've always loved Holden Caulfield, and I've learned a little more about him - and about myself - every time I read the book, which has been around now, continuously in print, for an amazing sixty years! Liked Slawenski, I first read the book at the age of 14. I'm 67 now and have probably read it at least a half a dozen times since then. It keeps getting better. And that is Salinger's genius. If he had never written another book, his place in American literature would have been just as secure.There are plenty of reasons to love this biography, but I'll let other people find their own reasons. Hagiography? Maybe. But so what? Kenneth Slawenski has done his homework, and has given us perhaps one of the most comprehensive looks at the life and work of J.D. Salinger yet written. I for one am grateful.Long live Holden Caulfield!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kenneth Slawenski presents life events and artistic productions in a way that is consistent with J. D. Salinger’s idea that the writer should not get between the work and the reader’s experience. Slawenski does not attempt to reduce the creativity of the short stories, novellas, and novel by making amateur psychiatric interpretation of the relationship between the author’s personality and his publications. Slawenski makes connections in time: what Salinger was doing in school, in the Army, and in his social interactions and what he wrote during those times. The biography clearly separates Salinger’s experiences and memories from his imagination. For example, a short story about war is very different from Salinger’s specific memories of the battles in Hurtgen Forest, more emotionally powerful and less susceptible to rationality.The increasing spirituality of Salinger described in the book as he developed as a person and an artist is embedded in his stories not explained by them. It is interesting that spirituality and creativity actually increased Salinger’s reclusiveness leaving what he considered to be almost perfect art as the communication between his readers and himself. Readers could be greatly affected by the art but not the man, his imagination not his personal thoughts and behaviors. When fans and journalists attempted to break through the lines of his work seeking the mystical man behind them, Salinger deliberately disillusioned them about himself and his characters with his final published work, Hapworth 16, 1924.World War II greatly affected Salinger. He came ashore at Normandy on D-Day and served in the deadly battles in Hurtgen Forest embedded with the 4th Infantry Division. Most men in the division died, but Salinger managed to walk out of the combat area with the survivors. The important information here is that Salinger was protected because of his role in the Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC). His job was to find, arrest, and interrogate soldiers in his unit who were subversive to the war effort. Also, he was valuable as a CIC sergeant because of his language skills and training in interrogating suspected Nazis living secretly in Division captured areas. He certainly saw mayhem and experienced the constant fear of impending death in the 4th Division, but without the same level of fighting risk as his fellow combat infantrymen. He had the opportunity to observe the emotions and motives of people who were experiencing extreme stress.Slawenski’s excellent biography indicates that there are personal letters and many pages of personal writing produced after Hapworth that were never meant for publication. As with his acquaintance Ernest Hemingway, perhaps such personal writing will be published and ultimately read by many a suitable period after his death. I read such letters and work of EH and I probably will do the same with the secret writing of JDS.