![]() ![]() The Glass saga, as he has sketched it out, potentially contains great fiction.the willingness to risk excess on behalf of one's obsessions, is what distinguishes artists from entertainers, and what makes some artists adventurers on behalf of as all. I expect that further revelations are to come. His most famous quote is, 'there are still a few men who love desperately. I love working on these Glass stories, I've been waiting for them most of my life, and I think I have fairly decent, monomaniacal plans to finish them with due care and all-available skill.New York TimesI am one of those.for whom Salinger's work dawned as something of a revelation. Salinger wrote a short story collection named Nine Stories, a short story called Franny And Zooey, and novellas named Seymour: An Introduction and Raise High The Roof Beam, Carpenters. It is a long-term project, patently an ambiguous one, and there is a real-enough danger, I suppose that sooner or later I'll bog down, perhaps disappear entirely, in my own methods, locutions, and mannerisms. ![]() Both stories are early, critical entries in a narrative series I'm doing about a family of settlers in twentieth-century New York, the Glasses. a short story collection, Nine Stories (1953) Franny and Zooey (1961). The author writes: FRANNY came out in The New Yorker in 1955, and was swiftly followed, in 1957 by ZOOEY. Jerome David Salinger was an American author best known for his 1951 novel The Catcher in. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |