It's not the size of the ship; it's the size of the waves.
- Little Richard

He’s Really Gone Now is What Salinger Is

salinger“The Catcher In The Rye” is a resonant novel with staying power, if nothing else.

Of course, there is plenty else. The book has spoken to and for disenchanted youth for decades now, each generation since its initial publication finding voice in the lucid expression of disengagement.

J.D. Salinger went reclusive decades ago. Given his impact, we kept waiting for more. We wait no longer.

His name would come up in conversation now and again. Whether speaking with somebody of my generation, Baby Boomers, or a later one, there would always be a memory.

The more literate would quote. From “Catcher” or “Franny and Zooey.” Or, one of the “Nine Stories.”

More often, those perhaps less conversant in his canon but well aware of Salinger’s importance and impact would simply utter “A Perfect Day For Bananafish.” Whether they had read it, or understood it, or simply knew of it.

Which short story has, besides its wallop, the perfect title, easily remembered.

I read “A Perfect Day For Bananafish” in college. So, when it has been mentioned through the years, I would always nod. Knowingly, of course. Then maybe retort with “Raise High The Roof Beam, Carpenters,” as if to find some station among the literati.

I reread it this morning. Truth is I had no recollection of what it was about. Though I knew it wasn’t bananafish.

Same thing with “Franny and Zooey.” Which, owing to my lack of perception when in college, never made sense to me. I reread it twenty or so years ago perhaps. Experience allowed me into its world. Though, frankly, all I recall is that it takes place in a train station during a holiday from college. Or, something like that.

And, if that’s wrong, it says more about my memory than J.D. Salinger.

As for “A Perfect Day For Bananafish,” wow. I understand how that might have shaken up the literary world when it appeared in The New Yorker over a half century ago. It is stunning. That Salinger guy sure could write.

I love this sentence, the first in the story’s second paragraph: “She was a girl for who a ringing phone dropped exactly nothing.”

Salinger, as with all great writers, could fashion sentences and phrases to be savored like an exquisite chocolate truffle. Slowly. By itself. Or in context, as if dessert for a fine meal.

Now that he’s gone, the search for the origins of the demons about which Salinger wrote shall accelerate. There shall be more parsing, more conjecture, more . . .

As for me, I intend to read the writing. At a juncture in my life when I might now understand what Salinger is intent to impart. And when I can appreciate the quality of his craft.

I’ll allow him to rest in peace.

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