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J.D. Salinger: An Un-Appreciation

February 9, 2010

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All of this fuss over J.D. Salinger is yesterday’s dinner warmed over. Make no mistake: Salinger was a terrific writer, and at one time he was very famous as an artist, not a recluse. But he ravaged his own reputation. He threw a cloak over himself, and ensured that he’ll be unknown to tomorrow’s readers, and little more than a footnote in the next generation’s literary histories.

Salinger’s life may be divided evenly into two parts. For the first 45 years or so, he sought to become a well-known writer, and succeeded handsomely. For the second 45 years, he sought to erase the evidence of the first 45 by building a wall of silence around himself and his work. Sadly, he succeeded very well at that too. Salinger’s most decisive act, of course, was to stop publishing. After publishing one extraordinary novel, The Catcher in the Rye, in 1952, followed by several volumes of interlinked stories about a family named Glass, Salinger quit. At the height of his influence in the mid-1960s, with his creative powers flowing abundantly, he simply withdrew from the world of publishing, readers, and especially critics. The prurient interest in Salinger’s isolation may endure longer than Salinger’s writing. Word has it that a Salinger documentary, prepared in secret, is already in the works.

J.D. Salinger was once the voice of a generation. Millions of readers of a certain age saw in Holden Caulfield, the hero of The Catcher in the Rye, an eloquent expression of their own longings and frustrations. But that generation is now middle-aged. They're the ones writing Salinger’s admiring obituaries now, so they exaggerate his importance based on how they remember him. Salinger was once very important indeed, but he did his best to muffle that importance by refusing any and all entreaties from anthologies, critics, and filmmakers.

Salinger was of course entitled to his personal privacy, and he was likewise entitled to write for himself and not for publication. But it’s more than a pity that he expended so much effort to keep people from reading the work that he so eagerly turned into the world at a time when he was feeling more generous toward it. Salinger refused requests to republish his work in different formats, and when people tried to write about it — and about him — he made it as difficult as possible. His successful court effort to block a biographer from quoting from his unpublished letters not only ruined one book, but also chilled the ambitions of writers who might have followed in its wake.

Salinger’s best-known short story, “A Perfect Day for Bananafish,” is about a prodigiously bright young man — someone with seemingly everything to live for — who shoots himself in the head one day for no apparent reason. Upon reflection, we can read “Bananafish” as a kind of allegory of Salinger’s own career. No one will ever know exactly why he shut himself down, but many have wondered — as they continue to wonder about the suicide in the story.

Perhaps Salinger might have kept going if he cared more about the connection that he made with his readers. Bruce Springsteen told an interviewer in 1984 that, “If the price of fame is that you have to be isolated from the people you write for, then that's too fuckin’ high a price to pay." Springsteen is in this respect the very antithesis of Salinger. Witnesses testify that Salinger continued to write in his New Hampshire hermitage, but he evidently had little desire to communicate with any reader but himself.

I imagine that Salinger’s unpublished work will be packaged and sold at some point. There’s too much money to be made for that not to happen. But the anticipation will surely exceed the actual event. In fact, I predict that Salinger’s significance will drop like a stone once that material comes out and gets digested, and that’s because of the anti-public life Salinger himself led.

Rebuffing the literary anthologies may prove to be Salinger’s most consequential decision in that regard, because it has kept his writing from the eyes of succeeding generations of readers. Most young readers encounter classic authors in the pages of such collections, and these encounters lay the foundation for their later reading. Salinger’s work is increasingly invisible to younger people now, so his reputation won't stay aloft once the brief, titillating pleasure of revealing what's in his writer's cupboard is satisfied.

That pleasure will also evaporate because the posthumous work is unlikely to be very good. Writers who refuse to communicate with their readers or with the larger world tend not to produce very good fiction because they’re no longer of the world that they’re writing about. Salinger effectively expatriated himself from the social world, but that world was changing around him through the decades of his isolation. We may expect stories encased in amber.

Salinger betrayed a great talent. Metabolically speaking, he died last week. But his passing really began decades ago.

Leonard Cassuto is professor of English at Fordham University and the general editor of the forthcoming Cambridge History of the American Novel.

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Comments on J.D. Salinger: An Un-Appreciation

  • Posted by Raymond Ford on February 9, 2010 at 7:45am EST
  • Yes,he withdrew from public life "especially from the critics" as you point out. Did he owe them something? Did he "owe" he readers anything? No, he did not. Because so much of his life, religion, politics and family struggle is expressed through his fiction.
    Yet, according to your trite argument, his reputation as a writer is directly proportional to the amount of attention he brought to himself. There's no other writer with such influence as Salinger with such a small output, and that speaks volumes towards his craft, his patience and his discipline. Not to mention his creativity, of which I am sure you have little.

  • A Litany of Misprision
  • Posted by Jonathan Fortescue on February 9, 2010 at 11:00am EST
  • Cassuto writes like a scorned suitor, and an ill-informed reader and scholar. For example, a better reader would know that Seymour in "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" is a returning war veteran whose "f-a-c-u-l-t-i-e-s," to quote another of the Nine Stories, are no longer in tact as a result of trauma suffered on the battlefield. There are discernable if underdeveloped reasons for his actions. Further, a better scholar would know there are several well-known examples of writers and artists who withdrew from the practice of the craft but whose reputations still survive. Melville comes to mind. Perhaps even more appropriately, so does Rossini who deliberately withdrew at the height of his fame and lived almost 40 more years. Since their work is in the public domain, anthologists and orchestras can select freely. (Of course, Melville is a complicated example in that he died in obscurity, only to be ressurected largely around the power of a single novel, Moby-Dick. My guess is that Salinger's slim output probably outsells fourfold on annual basis Melville's more voluminous offerings in Pierre, Omoo, Typee, etc.) Then there is the example of Emily Dickinson who published only ten poems in her lifetime but who has since become one of two seminal figures in all of American poetry. (I fancy Cassuto shaming her, were he her contemporary, about her resistance to scrutiny. How much luckier she was to have the more emotionally mature Thomas Wentworth Higginson as a champion.) If Salinger truly did write more and, if that writing has survived, its quality will certainly affect his lasting reputation. To assume that it will diminish his achivement is churlish. First, Salinger was sufficiently of this world to thwart the work of hacks and literary parasites. Second, even if there is novel after novel set in the local color of New York of the 1940s and 1950s, what a great canvas on which for Salinger to apply his great narrative precision. I hope there is more, reputation be damned.

  • JD one hit wonder
  • Posted by Joe , Critic At Large at Mental on February 9, 2010 at 11:00am EST
  • I read Catcher in high school in 1974. To me and many of my class mates, the book was already uninteresting, struck no chord or even remotely had an impression on us. What was the big deal? Why do we have to read this trivial story about some nerdy, slacker, New Yorker?
    People were being shot on campuses and every day the news blared with body counts. I reread this book last week because, with all the fuss, I wondered if I had missed something the first time I read it. I didn't. At best the book was a one hit wonder with the Jewish New Yorkers and he had a good agent. All this crap about shaping a generation is rediculous. I feel like tracking down his burial site and writing fyou on his headstone and his ahole agent's. Today, Holden would be considered emo. But no one will claim emo is going to shape a generation. Really. Rediculous.

  • Why so savage?
  • Posted by JJS on February 9, 2010 at 12:15pm EST
  • Salinger made a clear decision not to withdraw from the social world, but from the hyper-professionalized writing world in which the "ambition" of "biographers" and the opinions of critics matter more than the writer's quality of life (or his work). He did not reject people, he rejected fame. Perhaps you didn't see this:

    "J.D. Salinger a Recluse? Well, Not to His Neighbors"
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/01/us/01salinger.html?pagewanted=print

    With all due respect, the rather gleeful speculation about how bad his posthumous publications will be because he refused to conform to the expectations of the professionalized publishing world illustrates, to me, good reason why a writer might choose to avoid the professionalized publishing world.

    He wasn't a god, he wasn't a recluse, he was a writer and a man with every right to choose his own life. End of story, like it or not.

    The lionizing of Salinger - and the enshrining (entombing) of the myth of him as a bitter 'recluse' - is more assisted by this essay's particular kind of speculative fiction than it is by anything Salinger ever did. Reminds me of the way Frost has been turned into some kind of pissed-off Santa Claus who wrote happy nature poetry in order to better monetize the Frost franchise. It's ridiculous and offensive.

    "...a prodigiously bright young man — someone with seemingly everything to live for — who shoots himself in the head one day for no apparent reason. Upon reflection, we can read “Bananafish” as a kind of allegory of Salinger’s own career."

    That's some truly prodigious nerve. What a thing to say about a stranger's full, complex, long writing life. A life about which we know little because he didn't want us to.

    The cutthroat, personally vicious, competitive and derivative public storm of a writing world - one based more on celebrity culture and posturing by the day - is neither necessary for nor attractive to many writers. We may be expected to join the battle, and we may be punished if we don't (as here), but personally, I say good for Salinger.

    And, I suspect, good for his writing. Which was his.

    The writer is not the writing. He's also not our puppet.

  • Simplistic
  • Posted by JDF on February 9, 2010 at 4:15pm EST
  • One would expect a professor of English to have a more subtle take on these issues. As one commenter noted, Salinger did not retreat from life; he was an active participant in NH town life, which could provide all of the additional raw material needed to inform whatever he was composing. Furthermore, it is not as if Salinger's writing is dead to the world; go to any Border's or Barnes & Noble's and you'll see something of Salinger's there. Perhaps his writing may become dated at some point, but if that is the case, it has to do entirely with the quality of Salinger's writing, not whether Salinger allowed his work to be published in anthologies. Besides, the importance of the anthology as a means of reaching new readers is, thankfully, in decline, in the age of Amazon.com and electronic readers.

  • A bit early
  • Posted by Old Oligarch , Professor of Philosophy Emeritus on February 9, 2010 at 7:15pm EST
  • It's surely too soon to pass the judgment of history on a writer who's been dead for less than a month! Reputations fall and rise (and fall and rise...).

    Give us a bit of time to assess Salinger's work in terms of its literary merit and its place in some fictitious scholarly context.

    The tone of this article strikes me as unnecessarily venomous, not to say 'scholarly' in the bad sense.

  • p.s.
  • Posted by Old Oligarch , Professor Emeritus on February 9, 2010 at 7:15pm EST
  • It's sad that Professor Cassuto will be writing a history of the American novel; I'd be interested to know his principles of selection for inclusion in it, given that Salinger is apparently now out of the running.

  • The quite possibly non-existent posthumous novels of Salinger
  • Posted by David Feldman , Associate Professor/Department of Mathematics at University of New Hampshire on February 10, 2010 at 5:00am EST
  • It's a dark secret of academia that busy "scholars" will often form ironclad opinions of one or another complex work after having only examined a mere fraction of the effort in question, or even worse, actually publish reviews of books they've not read in their entirety. But here Cassuto gives the whole profession a bad name: he decisively pans literary creations that very possibly don't exist at all. Holden Caulfield and his creator had a word for arrogance grounded in ignorance.

  • I agree
  • Posted by Melanie on February 10, 2010 at 5:00am EST
  • Cassuto's thoughts are my sentiments exactly. Salinger had a right to do whatever he wanted, but he did seek the spotlight and then withdraw. We'll probably never know why. Personally, I'm going with some sort of mental illness. The quote from Springsteen is perfect - why seek fame if you are going to run from the results? And Springsteen is the perfect example of someone who can be hugely famous and still walk down a street in NYC or somewhere - maybe he'll have to exchange words with a fan but he won't be mobbed. It's the attitude that makes the difference. If someone says,"Bruce, I love your work." he says "Good news for me." and keeps going. I have to wonder what Salinger was afraid of - and I'm guessing that he was afraid that his next book couldn't live up to the hype no matter how good it was. It didn't have to - all artists have ups and downs - you don't give up and be a one hit wonder. Melville and Dickinson, while of the same ilk or better, are poor examples - they didn't live in an age where they would be stopped on the street or written about in the Enquirer. I was also underwhelmed by Catcher in the Rye when I read it. My children all read it in high school, recently. One didn't get it, one read and re-read it for a year and then moved on and one went all Mark David Chapman over it. I get that it effected people and that's great but it is overrated and I do believe he had to be mentally ill. I will be as delighted as anyone if his posthumous works turn out to be masterpieces but I'm not holding my breath. Until then, all you phonies stop mourning this writer - he was 91 - he had a long life and chose to live half of it in a bizarre fashion.

  • David Feldman
  • Posted by DFS , another math prof on February 11, 2010 at 9:30pm EST
  • You're right. The phenomenon you speak of is hero worship from the left.

    If you build it, they will come and teach your children 'all about' it.

  • Meek paranoid critics
  • Posted by Curtis Caulfied , Department of Philistia at Philistia State College on February 12, 2010 at 9:15pm EST
  • Yes, it's all a conspiracy by those "lefties" to get you to read propaganda.

    God help them for wanting to educate you. I'll forgive them for the effort, seeing how it's in vain, but I can't forgive such nonsense posted by a "math prof" (yeah you're "full" all right).

    Just because your bloated and hyperactive son doesn't want to read Catcher in the Rye does not mean he speaks for the majority of students out there.

    To all the meek paranoid critics: get off the internet and try reading great literature. The kind Salinger wrote. It may help you understand why you are so angry, bitter over the fact Salinger is so influential and his popularity has endured.

    It may help, but I doubt it.