Product Details
If You Really Want to Hear About It: Writers on J.D. Salinger and His Work

If You Really Want to Hear About It: Writers on J.D. Salinger and His Work
From Thunder's Mouth Press

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Product Description

Famously reclusive and yet an undying source of inspiration for generations of readers, Salinger is one of the greatest mysteries of American literature. This is the first comprehensive collection of writings about J. D. Salinger and his work, an amalgam of over fifty years’ worth of attempted interviews, documented sightings, unauthorized profiles, and stifled cries of devotion, as well as the best of the book reviews.

If You Really Want to Hear About It includes a never-before-published retrospective by Joyce Maynard, whose 1997 memoir, which documented her year-long affair with Salinger when she was eighteen-years-old, caused a rupture in the literary establishment.

Contributors include Betty Eppes, Michiko Kakutani, Alfred Kazin, Joyce Maynard, Mary McCarthy, Arthur Mizener, George Plimpton, Joanna Smith Rakoff, Ron Rosenbaum, Margaret Salinger, John Updike, Eudora Welty, Jonathan Yardley and many others.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #154416 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-06-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

About the Author
The twelfth of thirteen children from a San Francisco family, Catherine Crawford's upbringing in no way resembled that of Franny Glass. She works as a literary agent and lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and two-year-old daughter.


Customer Reviews

Excellent and well-balanced collection 5
Although there have been at least two other books offering selected articles on Salinger's work, this is the most comprehensive, wide-ranging and up-to-date by far. Editor Crawford casts a wide net, including critical analyses, memoirs, book reviews, interviews, and other material related to the author both as a writer and as a person. Even the internet was investigated, and it is good to see a long excerpt (updated) from Sarah Morrill's unique web site. The book covers the period from the early 1950s to the early 2000s. All Salinger fans must own this.

Trust me -- you do really want to hear about it5
This is a charming and amazingly well done book. A must read for both hardcore Salinger fans and anyone who ever had their life transformed after reading Catcher in the Rye in 8th grade. If you've ever been curious about the famously reclusive man behind some of your favorite stories, this book offers the most entertaining insights out there as far as I can tell. Great, great stuff. Not phony at all.

Jerry's world4
I can't say I'm a big JD Salinger fan - I always thought THE CATCHER IN THE RYE was a great, even must-read book, but only before the age of 17, after which it loses it's power to inspire and even entertain, and that the Glass stories were just a bit too pretentious. But I must admit after reading this anthology of essays, reviews, and personal memoirs (usually recounting attempts at meeting the hermit-like Salinger in person) I care even less for the writing and almost nothing for the man. The harshest critics here - Jonathan Yardley, Mary McCarthy, Louis Menand - seem to be right on target: it's just possible that the author who made his chief characters rail so much against "phoniness" might be the biggest phony of all. Salinger comes across as a possibly sexually perverted, definitely dictatorial, self-centered monster who is apparently lost in a make-believe world of 1940s movies and a daily writing regimen that might be producing numerous literary works for future generations of readers to ponder - or might be producing nothing at all. Alex Beam makes a good case that even Salinger's reclusion and maniacal desire to protect his privacy might be all a ploy to make sure he's never forgotten: when he's out of the news for a while he suddenly resurfaces, usually with outrage that once again his privacy has been violated. Beam calls him a "master showman, a genius spin doctor, a public relations wizard." Two people who knew him well - his daughter Margaret Salinger and his lover for a year Joyce Maynard - write about the man in totally unflattering terms. There are 29 selections included in this anthology and they span the gamut from fanatical worshipping to clear-headed debunking. My major complaint is with the extraordinary number of typos in the text: it's embarrassing and gives the whole book a feeling of being a throw-off not to be taken seriously. Other than that, it's a pretty interesting compilation.