J.D. Salinger
Writer
Jerome David Salinger wrote The Catcher in the Rye, the classic 20th-century novel of disaffected youth. Salinger started publishing short stories in the 1940s in magazines including the Saturday Evening Post, Colliers, and especially the New Yorker. The Catcher In the Rye was published in 1951, became a best-seller and remains a favorite of high school and college students. (The book tells the tale of Holden Caulfield, a troubled adolescent who leaves his fancy prep school for an urban walkabout.) Always a private man, Salinger became increasingly reclusive throughout the 1950s and eventually stopped making public appearances or statements of any kind. He refuses requests for interviews and has not published since 1965, though he reportedly continues to write at his remote home in Cornish, New Hampshire.Extra credit: Salinger served in the U.S. Army in World War II and participated in the D-Day landings of 6 June 1944... He married Claire Douglas, a student at Radcliffe, in 1955. They had two children, Margaret Ann (b. 1955) and Matthew (b. 1960), and were divorced in 1965... Salinger had a love affair with author Joyce Maynard in the early 1970s, which Maynard described in her 1998 memoir At Home In the World. She auctioned her personal letters from Salinger for nearly $160,000 in 1999... Salinger attended Valley Forge Military Academy from 1934-36; it is generally considered to be the model for the school Pencey Prep in The Catcher In the Rye.
Salinger appears with Howard Hughes in our loop on Recluses!
Other New Yorker mainstays include writers Joseph Mitchell and John Updike, humorists James Thurber and Helen Hokinson, and brainy book critic Clifton Fadiman.
Four Good Links
Dead Caulfields
Whimsical but detailed site devoted to his "early life and work"
Exploring The Catcher in the Rye
Unusual site with maps, indexes, and a few links to Salinger's most famous book
Books and Authors: J.D. Salinger
A helpful bio and bibliography
The NY Times: J.D. Salinger
Nifty collection of Salinger reviews and articles through the years
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
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Best Known As
Author of The Catcher In the Rye

