Writing
Related: About this forumJ.D. Salinger, E-Book Holdout, Joins the Digital Revolution.
'The Catcher in the Rye and other Salinger novels are coming out in digital formats, and the writers son plans to release more from his archives.
Ive spent my whole life protecting him and not talking about him, Matt Salinger said of his famously secretive father. But that is changing as he works to keep The Catcher in the Rye and other J.D. Salinger works alive in the digital age.
In the five decades since J. D. Salinger published his final short story, Hapworth 16, 1924, his small, revered body of work has stayed static, practically suspended in amber.
Even as publishers and consumers adopted e-books and digital audio, Salingers books remained defiantly offline, a consequence of the writers distaste for computers and technology. And while Salinger kept writing until his death nearly 10 years ago, not a word has been published since 1965.
That is partly because of his son, Matt Salinger, who helps run the J. D. Salinger Literary Trust and is a vigilant guardian of his fathers legacy and privacy.
But now, in an effort to keep his fathers books in front of a new generation of readers, the younger Mr. Salinger is beginning to ease up, gradually lifting a cloud of secrecy that has obscured the life and work of one of Americas most influential and enigmatic writers.
This week, in the first step of a broader revival that could reshape the worlds understanding of Salinger and his writing, Little, Brown is publishing digital editions of his four books, making him perhaps the last 20th-century literary icon to surrender to the digital revolution.
Then this fall, with Mr. Salingers help, the New York Public Library will host the first public exhibition from Salingers personal archives, which will feature letters, family photographs and the typescript for The Catcher in the Rye with the authors handwritten edits, along with about 160 other items.
And before long, decades worth of Salingers unpublished writing will be released, a project Mr. Salinger estimated will take another five to seven years to complete.
Combing through his fathers manuscripts and letters has been both enlightening and emotionally taxing, Mr. Salinger said in an interview to promote the new digital editions. . .
He doesnt want to inflate expectations for Salinger fans by describing the contents, beyond confirming that his father did continue to write about the Glass family the precocious cosmopolitans who feature in beloved stories like Franny and Zooey and SeymourAn Introduction among other subjects.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/11/books/jd-salinger-ebooks.html?
emmaverybo
(8,147 posts)unflattering memoir about her father.
In it, among many issues she explores involving his personality and writing process, she brings up how she believes growing up Jewish may have affected him in an era when, as just one example of national anti-semitism, medical schools restricted Jewish admissions.
Ironically, Salinger was shortly married to a former Nazi party member he had arrested during the war.
With digital publication will come renewed scrutiny of Salingers personal history, which I hope will be more edifying than salacious and condemning,
His sons decision will result in a gift to literature, regardless how the writing or Salinger as a man might be judged.
He lived to be 91; his last story, written in 1928, was published in the New Yorker in 1965.