New York Herald Tribune Book
Review , August 19,
1951
Shortly before his "Catcher
in the Rye" appeared, Jerome
David Salinger not only asked his publisher's
office (Little, Brown) to send him no reviews of his novel but
actually made them promise not to. "That"
said a friend of his the other day, "will
give you an idea of the kind of guy he is, "together
with the Salinger reaction to his publisher's
phone call informing him that the Book-of-the-Month Club has chosen
"Catcher"
as its midsummer selection.
"That's
good, is it?" said Mr. Salinger.
Later he asked that there be no special publicity to-do about
him, "because I might get to
believe it." As a matter of
fact, he was inclined to be annoyed by the picture of him that
filled the back of the book's jacket.
Too big, he said.
He was born in New York City on Jan. 1, 1915,(1919 ?)
went to military school at fifteen, and started writing stories
there - wrote them under the bedcovers at night, by flashlight.
He went to several colleges, graduated from none of them, and
passed a year in Austria and Poland, presumably to learn the export
business. He kept writing, if not selling. In 1939 he was in
Whit Burnett's short-story class at
Columbia, and his first published short story, "The
Young Folks," appeared in the
Burnett "Story"
magazine in March, 1940.
Mr. Burnett recalls with some pride his share
in the auspices of that debut, and has another pleasant memory
of Mr. Salinger. In 1945, by which time the writer was selling
regularly to the large-paying "slicks,"
"Collier's"
and "The Post,"
there arrives in the "Story"
office his check for $250 for the help of other writers. It had
been sent from Europe, where Mr. Salinger was then with the 4th
Division, Counter-Intelligence Corps. The check helped finance
"Story's"
armed services writing contest.
The first Salinger story in "The
New Yorker," where a number of
his greatest admirers first became aware of him, was "Slight
Rebellion Off Madison," sold
in 1941 but not published until 1946. Right now, according to
a Salinger authority, one of his best stories is locked away in
the safe of a woman's magazine which
paid a lot for it but for some reason is nervous about using it.
His thirty published stories will presently appear in book form,
it's said, which will emphasize another
of his talents - i. e. a gift for titles. "For Esmé -With
Love and Squalor" is probably
the best known of them.
He works with "infinite
labor, infinite patience and infinite thought for the technical
aspects of what he is writing,"
according to his friend William Maxwell, of "The
New Yorker." who in a recent
article quotes him as saying: "I
think writing is a hard life. But it's
brought to me enough happiness that I don't
think I'd ever deliberately dissuade
anybody (if he had talent) from taking it up. The compensations
are few, but when they come, if they come, they're
very beautiful."