



'Hapworth 16,
1924' is written in the form of
a letter from summer camp, in which the seven-year-old Seymour draws a
portrait of him and his younger brother Buddy. "When I look back,
listen back, over the half dozen or slightly more original poets we've
had in America, as well as the numerous talented eccentric poets and -
in modern times, especially - the many gifted style deviates, I feel
something close to a conviction that we have only three or four very
nearly nonexpendable poets, and I think Seymour will eventually stand
with those few." (from Seymour, An Introduction)
Twenty
stories published in Collier's, Saturday Evening
Post, Esquire, Good Housekeeping, Cosmopolitan, and the New Yorker
between 1941 and 1948 appeared in a pirated edition in 1974, THE COMPLETE UNCOLLECTED STORIES OF
J.D. SALINGER (2 vols.). Many of them reflect Salinger's
own service in the army. Later Salinger adopted Hindu-Buddhist
influences. He became an ardent devotee of The Gospels of Sri
Ramakrishna, a study of Hindu mysticism, which was translated into
English by Swami Nikhilananda and Joseph Campbell.
Club selection and won huge
international acclaim. It
sells still some 250,000 copies annually. Salinger did not do much to
help publicity, and asked that his photograph should not be used in
connection with the
book.

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