Salinger caught off guard, taken sometime in the past decade
Will the 90-year-old J.D. Salinger be forced to leave his New Hampshire home and return to New York City after leaving in 1953? The reclusive and elusive author filed a lawsuit yesterday in Manhattan federal court. The NY Post reports that the move was to "block an anonymous author from cashing in on the iconic coming-of-age novel with a follow-up titled 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye." The book has a character named Mr. C leaving a nursing home to visit many of the places Holden Caulfield did in the 1951 novel Catcher in the Rye. The book is dedicated to Salinger, where he is called: "the most terrific liar you ever saw in your life." The author, who goes by John David California, calls the hermetic legend a "great inspiration." If Salinger wins, all of California's copies of the book will be destroyed, and "he's also seeking unspecified damages from the alleged copycat author, saying his copyright 'is worth an enormous amount of money.'" This isn't the first time he's sued in a copycat case. Aspiring authors: the world doesn't need a sequel to any great classics (Catcher in the Rye 2: Electric Boogaloo just doesn't sound right).
Salinger caught off guard, taken sometime in the past decade
It will be very interesting to see if any of the writing he's done since his withdrawal will be published posthumously.
They better do this real quick.
shit J.D is still alive? haha oops
I understand the need for copyrights but geez, it has been a long while since the original work. Shouldn't the work become public domain at some point so everyone can benifit?
Where would Disney be if all the fairy tales are still copyrighted.
It will become PD.. in 2046 (iirc)
the man is still alive! you want every writer to lose the rights to their work while their still breathing?
they're, obviously. sorry