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J.D. Salinger: A Life (2010)

di Kenneth Slawenski

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
3101085,254 (3.65)6
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. Filled with new information and revelations, garnered from countless interviews, letters, and public records, this work presents his extraordinary life that spanned nearly the entire twentieth century. The author 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. This work features all the dazzle of his 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 is 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, this biography is Salinger's unforgettable story in full.… (altro)
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Very interesting! ( )
  iffland | Mar 19, 2022 |
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Salinger wasn't always so withdrawn.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. ( )
  hardlyhardy | Dec 15, 2020 |
Who was J. D. Salinger? Few, if any, American writers have provoked the same manic level of curiosity about their personal lives as J. D. Salinger did, much to his perpetual dismay and despite his deliberate and often extreme efforts to withdraw from such curious scrutiny. In this riveting biography, Slawenski (a professed Salinger devotee) respectfully provides a balanced and unsensationalized account of Salinger's life and work. Even so, it's doubtful that Salinger would've approved of the book, given his unwavering belief that a writer's work alone should speak for the writer, and that the details of said writer's life are frankly no one else's business. Salinger has now passed on, though, and I think this book will go far in dispelling some of the myths surrounding the man. The arc of Salinger's published writing career and its abrupt end in the mid-1960s has always intrigued me, but I only had a surface understanding of why Salinger had acted the way that he did. Slawenski delves into Salinger's Army career, his work habits, his religious beliefs, his popularity and resulting gradual retreat from society, his relationship to both his characters and his fellow humans, and out of it all comes a sympathetic portrait of a gifted artist almost wrecked by his own fame. Here was a man who just wanted to write and be left alone to do it, who respected his readers but strove to maintain a professional distance from them, and who did not relate well to other people, yet in certain ways relied on them a lot. Salinger seemed to inherently trust people at first, and yet as they came to disappoint him he moved swiftly and viciously to excise them from his life. This happened over and over with editors, publishers, friends, and lovers. At the end of his life, there were few left. Perhaps Salinger's reactions to his sudden fame seem extreme, but it's really hard to say. Many people have been destroyed or nearly so by their own launches into the spotlight. It must be incredibly stressful to live under such a microscope. We live in a culture today where so many people expect to know, almost as a right, every last detail about the personal lives of public figures. And now the Web makes it even easier and faster for the floodgates of speculation and rumor to open and spill forth across the screens of eager fans (or birdwatchers, as Salinger called them). One can only guess that had the height of Salinger's fame occurred in current times, he would've been even more beside himself with rage at the world. In the end, however, it's Salinger's published works that now live on beyond the man himself. Given how enraptured he was by his own characters, how absorbed he was in the crafting of his fiction, it is in those printed words where we are likely to learn the most about Salinger. After all, those words are what he intended for us as readers to focus on all along. ( )
  S.D. | Apr 4, 2014 |
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! ( )
  lindap69 | Apr 5, 2013 |
Average biography of a very reclusive figure. Has to really stretch in order to get some details. ( )
  HadriantheBlind | Mar 30, 2013 |
Although sometimes careless with language and facts, Slawenski unearths new details and provides a coherent narrative and an in-depth reading of Salinger's work and its links to his life. [...] However, these are minor objections to a welcome picture of one of the most singular characters in American letters.
aggiunto da GYKM | modificaWashington Post, Roger Lathbury (Feb 20, 2011)
 
For this reader, the great achievement of Slawenski’s biography is its evocation of the horror of Salinger’s wartime experience. Despite Salinger’s reticence, Sla­wenski admirably retraces his movements and recreates the savage battles, the grueling marches and frozen bivouacs of Salinger’s war. [...] Though Slawenski adds to the record, Paul Alexander’s biography is, to my mind, more dramatically vivid and psychologically astute.
aggiunto da GYKM | modificaNew York Times, Jay McInerney (Feb 10, 2011)
 
"This volume, “J. D. Salinger: A Life,” which draws liberally from Salinger’s letters and a memoir by his daughter, Margaret, is flawed by a tendency to assume direct correspondences between the author’s life and work. And it retraces a lot of ground covered in earlier books by Ian Hamilton and Paul Alexander. Still, it does so without the sort of condescending and at times voyeuristic speculation that hobbled those earlier biographies, and it does an evocative job of tracing the evolution of Salinger’s work and thinking. "
aggiunto da lorax | modificaNew York Times, Michiko Kakutani (Feb 10, 2011)
 
In light of what the author leaves out or gets wrong, what's left over? There's a lot of plot-summary of Salinger's fiction—much less fun than reading the fiction itself—and, after Salinger quit publishing in 1965, not much of anything. The last 45 years of Salinger's life are lumped toward the back of the book. Among other things, we learn that Salinger married, in 1992, "a professional nurse and amateur quilter" named Colleen O'Neill—40 years his junior—but that's about all we learn of the couple.
aggiunto da atbradley | modificaSlate, Blake Bailey (Jan 31, 2011)
 
The result is a first-rate book which is especially good on the links between Salinger’s fictions and their thematic developments. [...] The passages on Salinger’s own war show that Slawenski can be an excellent storyteller himself, as he follows his subject through the thick of the horrors from D-Day to the Battle of the Bulge, and then on to Dachau.
aggiunto da GYKM | modificaThe Telegraph, Tom Payne (Apr 6, 2010)
 

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The U.S./Canadian edition of "J. D. Salinger: A Life" published by Random House on January 24, 2011 is the same book as "J. D. Salinger: A Life Raised High" published by Pomona Books in the U.K. on March 15, 2010.
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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. Filled with new information and revelations, garnered from countless interviews, letters, and public records, this work presents his extraordinary life that spanned nearly the entire twentieth century. The author 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. This work features all the dazzle of his 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 is 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, this biography is Salinger's unforgettable story in full.

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