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Hinduism

Submitted by fayad on June 3, 2007

Category: Religion
Words: 1599 | Pages: 7
Views: 172
Popularity Rank: 61,419
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

y the 1960s, amid the growing independence of teenagers and their search for meaning in their lives, Salinger\'s story of 16-year-old Holden Caufield and his Christmas season jaunt in 1940s Manhattan seemed even more relevant than it had been in 1951. Sales grew rapidly as teenagers began reading the novel not only to satisfy class requirements (the book proved ideal for teachers seeking to connect their students with literature), but also as a source of answers, guidance, and inspiration in their own lives. Amid the war in Vietnam and a burgeoning counter-culture, even adults who found themselves perplexed by the younger generation began referring to the novel in new and immediate terms. This made Salinger a vastly popular and influential literary presence in a decade in which he published very little new work. Indeed, his output had slowed down considerably by the \'60s, and he became known principally through his works of the 1940s and \'50s, particularly The Catcher in the Rye and the anthologies that had been assembled of his shorter works, such as Nine Stories and Franny and Zooey. The man, himself, however, was (and remained) a mystery, which, apparently, is how he had always wanted it. Even when his stories began appearing in print in the early \'40s, Salinger did not allow his editors to include any information about him, ostensibly because he didn\'t want any personal details to distract the reader from the writing. By all accounts, the author\'s desire for privacy only increased in the decades to follow. Salinger pursued several legal avenues to preserve it, and specifically tried to prevent the publication of letters that he had written to others. The demand for his work was such that, in 1974, an enterprising pirate had published two volumes of The Uncollected Short Stories of J.D. Salinger, made up of several short works (principally from the early \'40s) that the author had chosen not to include in his official anthologies. Both volumes were...

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