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Salinger Letters Reveal His Dream of Visiting Williamsburg

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AP
In what is likely just the first of such discoveries, eleven previously unpublicized letters from J.D. Salinger have been unsealed by The Morgan Library and Museum, and are being prepared for exhibition. The correspondence between the author and Michael Mitchell, the designer of the first cover of The Catcher in the Rye, "reveals an enduring fascination with pop culture and politics that is at odds with the popular mythology of the past half-century of Mr. Salinger as an odd recluse," the Times reports. These revelations reportedly include:

Sharp references — sometimes a bit too sharp — to household names like John Wayne, Nancy Reagan and even Eddie Murphy... A night at the theater in 1951 ended with his being invited to sup at the elegant Chelsea [London] home of the couple who starred in the show: Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh. “Naturally, [over cocktails] some gin went up my nose. I damn near left by the window.”

Of most interest to Salinger fans is one 1966 letter in which he refers to an accumulation of "ten, twelve years’ work" that includes "two particular scripts — books really — that I’ve been hoarding at and picking at for years." Oh, and in another letter Salinger fantasized about visiting Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in "'the faint hope that some kindly old Hasid from the eighteenth century' would invite him home for matzoh ball soup or a cup of tea."

The letters were donated to The Morgan by Carter Burden 1998, who bought them from Mitchell. According to the Times, museum officials kept the letters’ contents under wraps, "even from their own staff, so long as Mr. Salinger was alive, out of a voluntary abundance of caution." Once these and others are made public, maybe Hollywood can option the rights to make a big movie about Salinger's life!

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Comments [rss]

  • hug0chavez

    cue the gothamist commenter antisemitic remarks.

  • ozik

    He, like, totally means Bushwick.

  • Jules W.

    As long as there's never a Salinger, Catcher Hollywood movie, i'll be fine.

  • I think you have it wrong: Holden hates adults and adulthood, which is exactly what Williamsburg is about.

  • Mark Cohen

    This should put an end to silly (Jewish) legal arguments about his status as a Jew. It was only one of his identities, but one he was at least as aware of as any other.

  • Qraymond

    Would love to imagine Caulfield going off on a that.

  • ForrestWhitaker

    Salinger, the first and ultimately the best, HIPSTER.

  • Gothamist_Cynic

    more like the original whiney emo.

  • theboneranger



    nice try, he meant the real williamsburg, not the suburb its become

    he'd probably projectile vomit on the face of the first waste-of-space 20something he bumped into.

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