Human being
A single straight fact is that Salinger was one of a kind. His writing was his and his alone, and his way of life was only what he chose to follow. He never gave an inch to anything that came to him with what he called a “smell.” The older and crankier he got, the more convinced he was that in the end all writers get pretty much what’s coming to them: the destructive praise and flattery, the killing attention and appreciation. The trouble with all of us, he believed, is that when we were young we never knew anybody who could or would tell us any of the penalties of making it in the world on the usual terms: “I don’t mean just the pretty obvious penalties, I mean the ones that are just about unnoticeable and that do really lasting damage, the kind the world doesn’t even think of as damage.” He talked about how easily writers could become vain, complaining that they got puffed up by the same “authorities” who approved putting monosodium glutamate in baby food.
Lillian Ross on her long friendship with J.D. Salinger, in the New Yorker.
February 5th, 2010 at 01:28
Speaking of Salinger, you may find the site below interesting if you’re shopping for t-shirts with silkscreened prints of some classic book cover art. One of them, of course, has to be Catcher In The Rye.
http://www.outofprintclothing.com/Shop_a/152.htm