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The International Writers Magazine: Review
Nine
Stories, by J.D. Salinger
Publisher: Little, Brown; Reprint edition (May 1, 1991)
ISBN: 0316769509
Dan Schneider
J.D.
Salinger is the Terence Malick of the writing world, save that
his art is not as productive and not as qualitatively good as
Malick.
Both
men are acquired tastes to most...both
are notoriously reclusive, with Malick readying only his fourth
film in a third of a century this year. Salinger has managed to
only proffer three readily available literary works in his nearly
sixty year long career - that being the overrated The Catcher
In The Rye - a good- but nowhere near great - novel, the hit
and miss Franny And Zooey, and the collection of short
stories known as Nine Stories, which has a reputation of
being, along with James Joyces Dubliners, one of
the great short story collections of all times.
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J D Salinger
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In a word - not.
Thats not to say that there are not some brief moments of greatness,
but Salinger seems to be one of those people who for whatever reasons
has found a critical niche, that a devoted following idolizes, and has
exploited it fully. Although its been decades since his last published
works his name still regularly ranks with the top writers of the 20th
Century, and his reclusive nature is enough to make Greta Garbo seem
a rank amateur by comparison. To me, this is as inexplicable as the
mystery of Harper Lees canonization for To Kill A Mockingbird-
another good book thats vastly overrated, although its reasons
for overpraise are far more obvious due to the progressive racial angle
of the work.
Nine Stories contains some famous tales, as well as tales that
surround the fictive Glass family. The first of these tales is called
A Perfect Day For Bananafish, and may well be the most famed
of all of Salingers works, outside of The Catcher In The Rye.
It was first published in The New Yorker, in January of 1948,
and in reading it it becomes apparent that my last observation is superfluous,
because it, and all the other stories (seven of which were published
in that magazine) definitely have that The New Yorker feel. If
you had read The Stories Of Alice Adams, as I recently have,
you know what I mean, and the formulae such tales follow. The dialogue
is generally first rate, especially compared to contemporary short fictionists,
and at least insofar as mid-20th Century New York plutocrats go, but,
it has not aged well. Woody Allen was far better at capturing that dilettante
feel a few decades later, but even his latest films lack that panache
of currency. Thats the problem with so specifically gearing a
tale towards a specific audience- its limited, ephemeral and loses
its lustre quickly.
In a sense, his dialogue, and even all these tales, are the prose equivalents
of John Drydens versic courtly intrigues. As for the actual tales,
A Perfect Day for Bananafish is basically about the last day
of Seymour Glasss wife. He and his wife Muriel, a definite pre-Stepford
Stepford wife, are staying at a beach resort, and in the first half
of the tale Muriel is gabbing with her overbearing mother. While the
conversation is fairly realistic, the things that the two talk of lend
no higher essence. Good dialogue, in stories, sound as if anyone could
be uttering the words, but are certainly written for a higher purpose.
While this dialogue sounds well, there is nothing illuminating within
the dialogue for either the characters nor the rest of the tale, which
is basically about Seymour meeting up with a young girl named Sybil,
whom he tells a tale of mythical bananafish. Then, abruptly the tale
ends with Seymour going up to his room and blowing his brains out with
a gun. The presumption is that Seymour is suffering from what would
later be called Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, because of references
to the war, a book Seymour mailed his wife from Germany, and references
to a psychiatrist- yet it is just as plausible that hes crazy.
This tale has been grossly overinterpreted, too. Many see the bananafish
significance as being symbolic for either sciolists like Seymour Glass,
or the overindulgent materialists like his wife, or Sybil, and while
some points can be scored for either camp, the tale within the tale
is so lightweight and absurd that even were we to accept that Seymour
is trying to be symbolic with a child, most would be turned off by his
condescension and dilettantism, making him an even more unsympathetic
character.
The next tale is Uncle Wiggily In Connecticut, another New
Yorker story that first appeared in March of 1948. This story is
about two unfulfilled suburban women who get drunk one afternoon. Disillusioned
by their lives, they self-indulgently prattle on about lifes unfairness,
and have learned little from its meager lessons. The ending is a nice
little turn, but overall the tale is all fluff and little substance.
Just Before The War With The Eskimos is the third story, from
June of 1948, and centers around two more dilettantes- the cynical and
self-centered Ginnie Mannox and her upscale tennis partner, Selena Graff.
In the tale Ginnie gets to meet Selenas brother Franklin, another
in the Salinger vein of self-absorbed and not quite with it men. He
cuts his finger and then offers Ginnie half of his chicken sandwich,
while telling his sister that she is not as well-adjusted as she thinks.
The tale ends with a nice observation, but is more interesting for Salingers
odd interest in very uninteresting characters- characters for whom narcissism
is all the rage.
The fourth story is The Laughing Man, from the March, 1949 New
Yorker. The title actually refers to the story within the story,
as well, where the nameless narrator, ostensibly Salinger, recounts
an adventure, at the age of nine, when he and other members of his Comanche
club were entertained by a Staten Island law student, nicknamed Chief,
who was paid to keep abreast of them. At the end of each day, the Chief
regaled them with the serial story of a grotesquely deformed anti-hero,
The Laughing Man, and his many cohorts - including a wolf and a dwarf
- lacing it with the emotional vicissitudes of his own doomed romance.
The Laughing Man regularly crosses the Paris-China border
to avoid capture by an internationally famous detective named Marcel
Dufarge and his daughter. Not uncoincidentally, The Laughing Mans
demise comes the same day the Chiefs romance is kyboshed. The
structure of the story is a bit too melodramatic, and a bit too trite
within its formulaic tale within a tale, even in that era, but there
are moments, and one can credit Salinger with attempting to break free
of formulaic storytelling.
Down At The Dinghy, from an April of 1949 Harpers magazine,
is the middle story, about another rich young dilettante woman named
Boo Boo Tannenbaum (née Glass) and her young son Lionel, who
hides upon his fathers boat. The relationship between mother and
son is explored as Boo Boo finally wins her sons trust.
For Esmé - With Love And Squalor, is the sixth story in
the collection, and appeared in an April, 1950 New Yorker. It
is also one of his most famous tales, as well as seemingly an autobiographical
one. In it Sergeant X meets a brilliant thirteen year old French girl
named Esmé (there seem to be few truly uneducated folk in the
Salingerverse), and her little brother Charles, one afternoon, at a
café, while stationed in England, during World War Two, right
before D-Day, a mission he will be sent on. They are both so taken with
each other, in their brief converse, that they vow to correspond with
each other, and that he will write a tale about her, in her honor, about
squalor - her favorite topic. The events of D-Day, however, have a negative
effect on Sergeant Xs mental state, and he forgets about Esmé
and his promise. With the war over, and stationed in Germany, X stumbles
upon an unopened letter from her, along with a wristwatch, symbolic
of his own fractured psyche, for its crystal was broken in transit.
Then, while holding it, he falls asleep, unable to work up the courage
to see if it works. The ending is a disappointment, gloom with a ray
of sunshine - quite familiar, for in it Salinger tries to be symbolic,
by having X try to spell out a word to mimic the ticking of the watch,
but merely manages to leave the reader shrugging their shoulders after
an otherwise good tale- probably the best in the book, as well as most
complex, especially in that we are shown the effects of war without
ever seeing the war itself.
Pretty Mouth And Green My Eyes is from a July, 1951 New Yorker,
and is a rather dull story about a middle of the night phone conversation
between two friends who are lawyers. The first lawyer has been prevented
from having a romantic evening by the second lawyers phone call.
His faithless wife failed to return home from a party. Seemingly using
his friend as a sounding board, the second lawyer rails about his marriage
and wife, whom he long ago stopped loving. This tale really goes nowhere.
It is not so much a story as a scene, a mood piece, and on that level
it works, but the characters, like most of Salingers, are not
involving, nor particularly deep.
The penultimate story in Nine Stories is De Daumier-Smiths
Blue Period. It was first published in the May, 1952 issue of the
World Review. It is a humorous tale about a pretentious, but
talented, young artist who moves to Montreal, Canada to become an instructor
at an arts correspondence course school. He puffs up his life experience
to include being older than he is, being an intimate of Picassos,
but hates his talentless students, save for an old nun, Sister Irma,
whom he imagines is young and on her way up in the art world, and whose
painting moves him. He then epiphanies after a night of failure.
The ninth and final tale is the mononominal Teddy, from a January,
1953 issue of The New Yorker. The title character is Theodore
McArdle, a ten year old on an ocean liner, coming home to America from
a European trip with his parents and sister. Teddy is a genius, and
forerunner of other Salingerian heroes, who converses with an odd man
named Nicholson about philosophy, reincarnation, and religion. Its ending
is rather weak, but it contains typically good Salingerian descriptions,
such as: His eyes, which were pale brown in color, and not
at all large, were slightly crossed--the left eye more than the right.
They were not crossed enough to be disfiguring, or even to be necessarily
noticeable at first glance. They were crossed just enough to be mentioned,
and only in context with the fact that one might have thought long and
seriously before wishing them straighter, or deeper, or browner, or
wider set. His face, just as it was, carried the impact, however oblique
and slow-travelling, of real beauty.
Most of the tales are filled with almost preternaturally wiseass, smarmy
kids who are de facto mini-adults, pre-cursors of the terminally wiseass
brats who have inhabited tv sitcoms for the last few decades, yet whose
moments of prodigy reveal that they are as hypocritical
as Salingers adults, while the adults in the tales are generally
what can most charitably be called losers, and losers unredeemed.
Then, again, to call them tales or stories implies that they arc. Most
of these pieces are vignettes, sketches, or mood pieces, and even then
the overpraise for them cannot be justified, for Raymond Carver sketches
far more convincing and three dimensional characters, but as stories-
or narratives- even granting their New Yorker conventionality,
they do not succeed as well as they could have, with a little less preciousness,
and a bit more real reality. Perhaps, also, its because
Carver, or a Pete Hamill, or a Robert Olen Butler, are more contemporary,
their characters sound more contemporary - even if set in the same time
periods as Salingers, but I think theres more to it. His
work does not date well, and has a precious mid-20th Century feel to
it, as if Civil Rights, Vietnam, Watergate, Reaganism, etc., never happened,
and this distances especially younger readers - not so much in a lack
of references, but a lack of realism. In a sense, Salingers short
stories are darker, yet still naïve, versions of the fictive and
idealistic Americana staked out by Norman Rockwells illustrations.
And to get a sense of why that fails, just compare any Salinger character
to the characters of a William Kennedy from the same historic time frame.
Kennedys characters are intelligent, artistic, dreamers, and failures,
but at whatever social level they occupy they are far more likely to
have been encountered by real readers. Now, before you state the obvious-
that Kennedys characters are all novelic creations, whereas all
but Salingers Holden Caulfield, inhabit a different medium- I
would state that a short storys essence is to illuminate character
and/or moment- to focus intently on what would be a crescendo or climax
in a longer work, so that explanation or claim does not really wash
with me.
Salinger, to me, seems much more akin to James Joyce in the fact that
one can argue he is a great writer, with moments of brilliance, but
not a great short story writer, just as Joyce was not a great novelist.
Their forms only superficially resemble short stories and novels, whereas
their works might more properly be classified mood pieces, as I said,
or true prose poems- a vastly overused term, as opposed to true proems
of the sort Charles Baudelaire, Rainer Maria Rilke, or Georg Trakl,
mined so effectively. Salingers short stories were recommended
to me for his dialogue by a friend, but it is his descriptive powers
that are his greatest strength, not his conversational exchanges. The
dialogue can be good, but it can also be pretentious- that spoken in
The New Yorker, but not by real New Yorkers, and the sort only
spoken in short stories, not the real world. As stated, one need only
be a Woody Allen film aficionado to appreciate his far greater ear for
pretentious WASPy colloquy, whereas Salingers can ring false and
strain credulity - seeming, at its worst, like John Updike, but with
more breadth- especially when put into the mouths of babes, literally.
These Nine Stories are hermetic 1950ish tales, whose humor
is more based upon the fact that they are written in an oddly exclusive
fifty to sixty year old idiom than being truly comic portrayals of human
frailties. They are also strangely void of any real deep philosophy
or insight; instead being mired in the then-current Freudian and pseudo-Freudian
machinations thought to motivate real people, yet which have hooked
deeply into the psyche of many readers, despite their absurdity. Yet,
there is a certain critic-proof quality to the tales because of this
near-fetishism not of the actual writing, but the meta-idea of what
the writing is deemed to be about and represent. This is because it
is rare, in the criticism of Salinger that Ive read, that what
the stories actually are about and/or accomplish, are addressed. Instead,
there is a cultic quality to the ogling of the Glass and Caulfield families,
partly buttressed and abetted by Salingers own weird public personas
bizarre appeal- think Howard Hughes or Michael Jackson, wherein a member
of either clan could pick their nose or suck their thumb (with or without
booger attached) and Salingerians would insist that some cosmic relevance
or Oriental or Zen symbolism was afoot, merely because of the way the
characters finger plumbed their nostril. This also allows Salingerians
to pummel those who are not as impressed, with the writing of their
hero, as being shallow or unenlightened, rather than merely able to
see the limitations and flaws that are manifest to all but the devoted.
Salinger is held up as a veritable godhead of anti-materialism and shallowness,
yet this is not only a simplification, but an outright misread. Salinger
is not a prophet against shallowness, rather an advocate of a different
form of shallowness- intellectual shallowness to narcotize one from
lifes pain, rather than the more manifest spiritual shallowness.
Just look at characters like Esmé- shes a phony, and even
Teddy McArdle is a boor in the making. On top of that, Salinger is also
a satirist, a point even his greatest admirers miss, although his satire
is sometimes lame, and is taken for realism by those enamored
of stereotypes. Yet, these very misreads lend a cultic quality to Salingers
work, and this sort of non-critical adoration is what many writers seem
to want for their own work, but the truth is such personal fawning obscures
any work, and instills an artistic reliance on things not actually present
in the body of the artwork to define it. This is a dangerous precedent
for any art or artist, and not something to be encouraged.
Not being subject to such blinders, though, I can state that my final
verdict is that J.D. Salinger is a vastly overrated writer, wont to
weak and predictably contrived endings, quite insular, and non-universal-
the perfect prerequisites for a cultic figure- but that does not mean
he is not a good writer, by any means, just not nearly as great as his
most deluded cultists believe.
© Dan Schneider July 2005
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