Stuff You Should Know - The Life and Works of J.D. Salinger
Episode Date: December 5, 2023J.D. Salinger was a complicated and problematic human who stopped publishing soon after creating one of the great works of literature. Listen in today to learn the good, bad and ugly sides of the man ...who got famous, then dropped out.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show.
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Free never sounded so good.
Hey everybody, we want to let you know that we are doing our traditional Pacific Northwest
swing for our live show.
Next year, in fact, the end of January next year, very early next year.
And we're starting out in Seattle, Washington on January 24th at the Paramount Theatre.
It's huge.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio.
of I Heart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh, there's Chuck Jerry's here too. We just want to be alone.
Which makes this stuff you should know.
That's right, that was Greta Garbo doing JD Saladger.
Oh, I never heard that.
You never heard Greta Garbo say that?
I've gone to be alone.
No, I haven't.
Yeah.
Another recaluce, right?
Yes.
That's why I said that.
She could really probably identify with JD Salinger.
Yeah.
What's Salinger, have you read, if any?
I read for Esme with love and squalor
as recently as last night.
And that's it.
Oh.
It's good, huh?
It was great.
I actually feel like I really missed out and not reading Salinger 20 years ago or 30
years ago, something like that.
I just didn't and I don't know why.
But yeah, he was really good.
Yeah. And I don't know why. But yeah, he was really good. Yeah, I was an English major,
so I read a lot of his stuff.
Catcher in the Rye was one that I actually do
because I was doing a thing where I was kind of
rereading it every 10 years or so
because that's a book where in your perspective
as a reader can really change how you view the book.
And I found that after I reread it the second time
and I was like, hey, wait a minute,
I should reread this thing like every decade or so.
So I'm definitely do.
And then I read nine stories.
I read almost all of the glass family stuff.
I read most of this stuff that was popular
and widely available and wasn't just like, you know,
something in the New Yorker that, you know, was never put in book form or whatever.
Right. So I read a lot of stuff.
Yeah, and it sounds like your relationship with Salinger is kind of mirrors my relationship
with the early works of Adam Sandler.
We rewatch heavy Gilmore probably every 10 years to revisit it.
See how it's changed perspective because I've changed, you know.
That's really funny, but Adam Sandler is and is complicated and potentially troublesome
and problematic is JD Salinger was as a person and we'll get to all that stuff.
That sounds like the somebody who hasn't really looked into Adam Sandler's early works.
Oh, okay.
So, yeah, I had no idea about the problematicness of JD Salinger.
I just knew he was a revered writer or recluse.
And now I realized he was a really great writer too.
In the most approachable way, but the thing
that struck me about reading about JD Salinger, which is one of my favorite things to do,
like reading about a good movie or reading about an author or something like that.
So I got to do that researching this episode.
One of the things that struck me is as approachable and almost like folksy as his writing is.
He is beloved by like literati types as well.
Normally he would be poo-pooed and looked down upon
and I think maybe he was during his career,
his actual career by some of the more like literati types,
but today he's revered as anybody,
maybe even more so,
because I think there's also a bit of affection
that people hold for him and is writing
in addition to feeling reverent toward it.
Yeah, and I also think the Disappearing Act
added a lot to his legend.
I mean, I'm not the only one that thinks that,
but it's impossible to say what that would have looked like.
He just kept publishing stuff and stayed in the public eye, but
when you disappear, you're going to add a lot of mystique and interest, I think.
Yeah, exactly. And by the way, if you hear some distant
construction noise today, there's nothing I can do about that.
Oh, I hope that came through in the crane episode. I don't think it did.
So, yeah, if you've never heard of JD Salinger, we should probably give you a little background.
He published the catcher in the Ryan 1951.
It dropped like a neutron bomb on America and essentially created the current popular image of a teenager.
Yeah.
Especially disaffected disillusioned teenagers who are starting to realize the world
is not what they've been told it is their entire lives up to that point.
Phony perhaps?
He started that.
Yeah, Phony.
He used that word a lot.
Yeah, Phony.
And it's hilarious.
It's a hilarious word, especially when you use it earnestly.
Yeah, I agree.
I like it.
But that was like the the protagonist of
Ketchar and the Rise probably his favorite word. Holden Caulfield's favorite word was phony.
And that's pretty much all you need to know. We can end the episode here really.
Or we could go back to when he was born. Sure. Jerome David Salinger and Manhattan, New York.
In 1919, on New Year Year's day to a Miriam
Salinger and Soul Salinger. He has a sister name or had a sister
named Doris, seven years older, that he remained close to. And
he was he was sunny to his parents and his sister. His dad was
Jewish and was he was an executive. He was not, he worked for
meat and cheese importing business and was not super
close to his son. He didn't get his writing. He was sort of that, you know, kind of what
you would think of the 1920s and 30s father who just wasn't much of a father. It wasn't
around much. Didn't invest a lot of time in his children. While his mom, Miriam, was the opposite. She was a very
doding mother, Irish Catholic woman who loved Sonny, young JD, thought he was going to be a great
writer. He would joke at one point to his friend that she walked me to school until I was 24 years old,
dedicated catcher to his mom. And there's this very sweet story that day found. He read
a full biography, I think of him, for this episode, but when he was 18, he was working at writing.
He wrote from the time he was very young. And his mom slipped a little message under the
door that said, I accept your story, consider it a masterpiece. Check for $1,000 in the mail,
Curtis Publishing Company.
Pretty neat.
Pretty great.
Yeah, so he was raised, I guess, upper middle class.
And I mean, that's a pretty typical,
like, combination, like a distant father and a doting mom.
Yeah.
That produces a certain kind of kid
and it seemed to have produced JD Salinger
pretty predictably.
But the fact that he grew up on Park Avenue and Manhattan
and went to camp with other Jewish kids every summer,
like he had like a very typical, I guess childhood,
but that seemed to have converged
with like a pretty sensitive
type. Like he was a sensitive person and that allowed him to kind of see things for, you know,
what they really were. And he also had a talent for putting that into understandable language.
And all of that put together made him the amazing writer that he became.
Yeah, absolutely. He would have been going by Jerry to his the amazing writer that he became. Yeah, absolutely.
He would have been going by Jerry to his friends and people that he knew personally.
And enrolled initially at a place called McBernie Preparatory School, a private school in
Upper Westside.
And he was kind of a whizaker, a little sardonic, a little sarcastic.
He did not make great grades.
They pulled him out after his sophomore year and sent him to military school, Valley Forge
Military Academy in Pennsylvania.
And this was a direct model for, if you've read Ketcher and the Rye of Holden Caulfield's
Pinsy Prep School.
It was a very kind of autobiographical, in some ways, take.
We'll also talk about some ways where he diverged from Holden Caulfield for sure.
But he was a big, he did great.
That was one of the big differences.
His Holden Caulfield was not happy at Pincey Prep.
It seemed that JD Salinger really got a lot out of Valley Forge and was very, very active.
Yeah.
He joined the Drama Club.
He found acting, which apparently was something I think he discovered
acting at camp one year and was like, I love this. So he did every play he possibly could at Valley
Forge. He was the editor of the yearbook. I mean, like, you know, disaffected, isolated types don't
usually become editors of the yearbook at their school. It was a real distinction between his experience and Holden Koffiel's
experience. When he got the college, though, it was a different story. And probably because
Valley Forge was very structured, enrigid, and he knew what to expect, and he thrived
in that. As we'll see, he also seemed to have thrived fairly well in the army. In college, one of the first things you realize is like, nobody's keeping tabs
on you. You have to motivate yourself to get up and go to the class. And that can be
really difficult. It's difficult for everybody at first, typically, but it can be like a
non-starter for some people who are ironically non-starters.
Yeah. I remember in college, I was eager and I was all in, but you skip your first like a non starter for some people who are ironically non starters.
Yeah. I remember in college, I was eager and I was all in, but you skip your first class.
And then you're like, Oh, wait a minute. You can do that. And nobody, nobody, yeah,
you hit out in your apartment the whole day waiting to get in trouble. And nobody came.
Sometimes the teachers keep track. I remember in college, some of them kept certain amount of absences were allowed or whatever. Some didn't at all. The big classes and, and the teachers keep track. I remember in college some of them kept certain amount of absences were allowed or whatever. Some didn't at all the big classes and
and the teachers like hey you don't have to be here if you don't want to. Yeah, it's like
it's to your detriment and you will learn that. You'd be like why do you have to say the hardwares part?
It was going so well. He found that like you said at college. He went to NYU, but they're in Greenwich Village. There were too many other things going on at that time.
He flunked out.
And his father was like, all right, you should get into business, like, you know,
follow your old man into the meat and cheese business.
So he shipped him off to Poland in 1937 to study under the Bacon King of Poland, not the
sausage king of Chicago.
And Salinger was like, this is gross.
I'm not doing this.
He went to Vienna and lived with a Jewish family.
And Felon loved, he learned German and Felon loved with their daughter.
And very sadly, that family did not make it through the war.
He left in 1938 just before the Nazis came into power and that family
did not survive. And he wrote a short story, a sort of fictionalized version of that many
years later called a girl I knew.
Yeah. He tried college again. He went to a place called Ersiness. Ersiness. That's what
I'm going with, near Valley for his Pennsylvania, and didn't work out again.
Then when he came back home, he said,
all right, I'm just going to become a writer.
And his mom was like, all right, that's cool.
And his dad was like, no, you're going to get
in the Hammond Chews business, like I said.
And apparently they came up with a compromise
that he would take writing classes at NYU or Columbia.
I can't remember which one.
I think Columbia.
And he locked out by taking a class by given by the editor, Whitburn net.
And Whitburn net had a knack along with his wife who also edited this magazine story magazine.
His wife, Halley or Haley, they had discovered or would go on to discover
some pretty, like a pretty amazing stable of writers if you ask me.
Yeah, for sure. You should go ahead. Yeah, such a great set up. Say yourself up.
Oh, oh, thanks. There was Williams, Kamatynise, Truman Capote, who was well known for his,
Truman Capote, who is well known for his rough and tumble westerns, and Norman Mailer,
who wrote the Jefferson's. Yeah. If you've got Norman Mailer, Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams, and JD Salinger on your list of writers you've discovered, you're doing pretty well. Yeah,
it's not amazing. Like they basically discovered the who's who of 20th
century men writers. Yeah, absolutely. So he at what, how do you say it? Ursonus? Yeah.
At Ursonus, it was sort of like other college. He wasn't taking it super seriously.
Until one day, as the story goes, Whitburnet was reading aloud the Faulkner short story
that evening's son.
And he didn't, apparently,
didn't like read it very dramatically.
He just sort of read it straight,
just read the words as they were,
and Salinger, something about that really grabbed a hold of him.
And he said,
this is the way
forward for me. I want to write in a way that doesn't get in the way of a reader. I
want the reader to discover the emotion and the meaning by reading it and you know
maybe a podcaster one day will read catcher in the rye every 10 years and take a
different meaning because I haven't explicitly sort of said what the meaning is.
And like you were saying that his writing was, it wasn't fancy. It was very sort of plain
and accessible. And that's I think why he got through to so many people. Yeah. The thing is,
is I don't know if it's as attention to detail or as eye for detail or as ability to describe
things in detail without becoming bogged down by them.
Who knows?
But I just think there's such an amazing epiphany to realize that probably up to that point
he'd been trying to lead readers along around by the nose, feel this.
Like you should be feeling this right now.
Just instead to realize like, no, you can write in a way
where you leave it up to the reader.
Like, that's probably one of the best epiphanies
a writer can possibly have.
And you don't, I haven't run across that very often.
Like it's rare, I think, to see there's a specific epiphany
that creates the writer that everybody comes to love.
That's not, not everybody has that kind of thing.
Yeah, he stopped ending every chapter with, get it?
What's funny is he decided to just kind of get out
of the Rear's way and let them to figure it out for themselves.
But he was also the King of italics to emphasize points.
Like, oh, this word, this is an important word.
This is what italics says and he
used italics like constantly yeah um so he uh failed that class but he re-enrolled in that same class
uh this time with a little more spunk i think and gay burnett some of his stories and burnett
immediately knew that he had a pretty sharp talent on his hands and mentored young Salinger and published his first work called the Young Folks in the spring
1940 edition of story in which he was paid 25 bucks which is a little more than
500 today not bad no and he just kept writing just writing and writing writing
is one thing has has been made clear about JD Salinger up to his death and at 91 years old
is that he loved to write and wrote and wrote and wrote and wrote always. He didn't publish a lot and
we'll get to all that but doesn't mean he wasn't writing. He was writing from the time he was a
teenager until he died. He always wanted to be published in the New Yorker. That was this big dream.
They turned him down seven times
until they accepted that slight rebellion off Madison
and 41, which had the character of Holden Caulfield,
the first story that had Holden.
And very disappointingly,
after Pearl Harbor, they shelved the story for five years
and it just wasn't a time to publish a story like that I guess.
Yeah, no for sure. They said don't you know there's a war going on and I say we take a break and come
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Free never sounded so good. Okay, so JD Salinger, when War broke out when America entered War War 2, he signed up
he enlisted.
He actually tried to go to officer school and they were like, nah, you're a little, a
little too fresh for us.
So he ended up, I think you,
nowadays you have to have a college degree to get into OCS.
I don't know if it was the case back then.
It could have been, who knows?
But he was, he just went from, you know, base to base,
um, just doing mundane stuff,
probably not loving life too much,
but I'm sure he had a lot of free time to write and he wrote, wrote, wrote.
Um, and then it wasn't until I think 1944 that he ended up in Europe. And his movements and the
participation of the events that he took place in from June of 1944 through winter of 1945. He was basically at every major event in the
European theater. Everything from landing on Utah Beach in Dede to liberating the camp at Dachau,
like he was literally there and participated in all of that stuff. And the fact that he survived is intense.
Like he was in some of the most intense fighting
that the entire war saw over this course of like,
you know, a year basically.
Yeah, that reminds me of,
maybe Jerry can bleep this,
the great line from Rushmore,
when Max first meets Bill Murray's character
and he says he was in Vietnam, he goes, for're in the ****, yeah, I was in the ****.
It's good line.
JD Salinger certainly was, like you said, and interestingly, he had, when he stormed the
beach at Utah Beach on D-Day, he had the beginnings of Ketcher and the Rye and his
knapsack.
He was working on that book already.
He only wrote about the war through the short story, the Magic Foxhole, where he wrote about D-Day. He did not talk about it much. It is clear that it informed the rest of his life, though.
And we'll talk about those moments as we go along through his life.
But I think two-thirds of his regiment died within the first few weeks, close to two thirds
after D-Day.
So it was pretty brutal stuff.
You know, the bleakest battles you can imagine being pinned down in the Hurtken Forest
in Germany.
Thousands of people were freezing to death.
He survived that. And then, like you said,
at Dachau in 1945, apparently on the same day that Hitler shot himself, they came upon Dachau,
and he talked about never in your life not being able to get the smell of burning flesh out of his
nose. Yeah. He was also in the battle of the bulge that finally turned the tide against the Germans
in World War II, where 75,000 German soldiers died. Like, this was over the course of weeks,
tens and tens of thousands of people dying all around you all the time. He was there
for all of it, and he eventually became, I guess, an officer at the very,
yeah, he was a counterintelligence officer. His specialty was interrogating people. He used
the German that he picked up when he lived with that family in Vienna just before the Nazis
came to power to interrogate Nazis that he ended up capturing, you know, less than a decade later.
Quite a turn of events, if you think about it.
Yeah, and pretty heavy stuff.
And for all of this, and on VE Day,
they say, stick around.
We don't want you to go home.
We'd like you to stick around for a D-Notsification mission.
So all of a sudden, he was pulled away
from his 12th regimen and the friends he had met there.
And he got depressed and, you know and he was clearly affected with PTSD.
They call that battle fatigue at the time.
And he checked himself into a hospital at Nuremberg for PTSD treatment.
And eventually, well, he read it for SMA with love and squalor is a story about a World
War II that recovering from PTSD and Germany.
Yeah, it's a wonderful story.
You know what? I just realized his stories, at least the one I read,
but from reading about other stories, they seem to have kind of like
an oh Henry quality of things surprisingly turning out for the best in the end.
Is that correct? Yeah.
Like he was optimistic, hopeful.
Like eventually he was hopeful,
it seems like in most of his stories.
Maybe not a good day for banana fish,
but some of the other ones,
all the most of the other ones.
He seemed to just be a sentimentalist, I guess,
where it just didn't end too bleakly.
Like it was bleak and then in the end, it got better.
At the very least, that's how it seemed to me for,
for Esme with Love and Squalor.
Well, I'm catcher in the ride.
Well, we can talk about the ending a little bit.
We don't want to give it that way too much.
I guess we are going to give it away a little bit.
Well, where he ends up on a ranch,
living with Truman Capote, out west.
We'll give a spoiler warning when that comes up.
Okay.
So he finally got to go home, but he wasn't coming home.
He was discharged, but he told his family, hey, I'm going to stay in Germany.
I fell in love with a woman named Sylvia and we got married, but they were not married
long.
It was only eight months, and he did not write during that period So he eventually would go back to New York and
Started to sort of throw himself into the you know the night clubs of the 1940s New York and sort of sleeping around
with women in New York
But he was you know he was suffering from PTSD at this time for sure
Yeah, just one one little note on Sylvia, his first wife, she was a Nazi party official who he arrested during his denotification
project and ended up marrying her.
And he referred to her as saliva for the rest of his life whenever he talked to him.
Yeah, his son was like, because there were rumors that he had written stories
about that marriage and his son Matt was like,
that's a joke, like that didn't even register
in his life hardly, he did not write about it.
So his hitting the nightclubs
and picking up the dams is not doing it for him.
It's not numbing things.
He realizes at some point that he needs a different,
a different way forward.
And I'm not sure where he picks it up,
but he started with Zen Buddhism.
I don't know where he was exposed to that.
Maybe just in Greenwich Village in general, I'm not sure.
But that was the first step on a path
toward a lifelong search for enlightenment.
And as we'll see, he came to view writing as ultimately as path toward enlightenment and therapy.
But he started out by trying to figure it out using Zen Buddhism and later on,
Hindu Vedic spirituality.
In duvetic spirituality. Yeah, absolutely.
And part of the sort of spiritual awakening included, hey, I need to get out of New York.
If I want to write and I want to finish this book I'm working on this novel, New York
is too distracting, it's too loud, I need more peace and quiet.
I need to be able to meditate.
And so he left New York City in 1949 and went to Westport, Connecticut.
And he finished a catcher in the rye there.
His obviously seminal work.
And there was a biographer who said, JD Salinger spent 10 years riding the catcher in the rye
and the rest of his life regretting it.
And that kind of puts the nail in the head because that was that book was such a big deal. And it put him in
such a spotlight that a he didn't like that spotlight and B he hated the book in publishing
industry and everybody in it it seemed like almost. Yes. So just a little bit on the publishing of Catcher and the Right, right?
Like it was just an immediate hit from what I can tell.
Like people had been sitting around waiting for it. It almost seems like.
And to date it sold something like 65 million copies.
65 million copies, Chuck, about a half a million every year still. So I got a couple
of stats for you. If I may. Yeah, yeah, please. That's number 18 all time for novels. And I was
kind of curious, do you have any idea what the number one best selling novel of all time? Not book novel novel. So not the Bible. Right. Right. I would say how the West was won by Truman Capote.
No. Don Quixote, which makes sense because it was sort of one of the first great novels.
500 million copies, which is more than double the next to Taylor two cities is next at 200 million.
Then Lord of the Rings, the little prince and the hobbit.
And then Harry Potter, dude, owns numbers 11 through 16.
Wow.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah, I mean, imagine being a living, a living writer who's just written those things in the last like 20 or so years.
And you own that many on the top list.
That's nuts.
Well, imagine being Dan Brown then because he's the modern writer at number 10.
The Da Vinci code is the number 10 best selling in Hubble.
I believe that.
I mean, everybody was talking about that.
80 million books.
But yeah, number 18, 65 million books and still selling strong is pretty great.
So please continue.
And he was able to like live off of royalties
for the rest of his life.
It was like, that's it, I just struck him.
I'm fine for the rest of my life.
I'm not sure how long it took for that to become clear.
Maybe 1965, I don't know.
But he did, he never needed to work again
from that point on essentially.
So when he wrote it, there was a biographer
that likened it to a war novel,
disguised as a coming of age story.
Yeah.
And what they were saying was that,
like at least if you're looking at it
through the lens of JD Salinger,
the writer himself writing it,
this was his spiritual catharsis.
This was him finding a way to put World War II behind him
as best he could,
enough at least to get on with his life.
And like you said, what he experienced in World War II
informed the rest of his life,
or colored the rest of his life informed the rest of his life or colored the rest
of his life for the rest of his life.
But this got out the darkest, gunkiest, worst stuff.
It seems like getting Ketcher and the Rye out there.
Yeah, I think so.
And you know what, let's not spoil the ending except to say that it does in with some hope.
It does.
Because I don't think we should even say, like people should read it.
It's just one of those books, I think, that like people should read. I'm about to do that with
Moby Dick. I've never read it. And my buddy, our friend, Joey Sierra, who did with his brother, Andy,
did the theme song to this stuff. You should know, show. Yeah. He collects Moabie Dicks and he's like obsessed with the book and he's like, dude, just
read it.
Just trust me and read it.
And I was like, all right, I'll read it.
Okay.
But Ketcher and the Rise another one, I think, where, you know, just give it a read.
It's a great book and it's just one that's, I hate to say like it's an important work,
but it is.
Sure.
We won't give away the end just suffice to say that he finds the kidney donor. He needs
That's right
So he has doesn't have a good
Experience with the publishing process like I said he hated it. He fought with the editors
He didn't like to cover the book.
The original cover was that kind of weird looking drawing of a carousel horse with a little
small bit of the New York City skyline in the lower left. He didn't like his photo on the back.
He eventually, I believe, was able to get that removed in the third printing.
That, you can get a lot of money
if you got that first edition catcher
then you're holding on to something pretty valuable.
Can you imagine how much those pages of catcher
and the rye that were in his knapsack
when he stormed Normandy would be worth?
If that's surely they're still out there somewhere,
I cannot imagine how much some tech billionaire
would pay for those.
Yeah, no, no, totally.
And then like, I'll use it as a rolling paper.
That's funny.
Nine stories came next.
That's a great one too.
Most of those were written before.
A catcher was actually published, but that was also a best seller.
Those are short stories, right?
A collection.
Yeah, nine of them, strangely.
It could also refer to a specific building
or something like that.
No, no, no, good.
I was joking because we talked about this,
wean's, our 10 Golden Country Grates,
didn't have 10 songs.
So awesome.
It was because it was the guys they played with
or were 10 of them.
Or was it 12?
Why can't I remember?
I don't remember. I don't remember.
I don't know.
All right.
It's not even a question of my memory failing me.
I didn't have the foreknowledge to lose to begin with.
Yeah, it's 12, Golden Country Grates,
but there's not 12 songs.
And people thought that was Wayne making a joke,
but they were like, no, the 12 Golden Country Grates
were these old timers from Nashville who played with us.
So wait, one more thing.
Well, then that's not a joke.
That's just a misunderstanding. Exactly. So wait, one more thing. Well, then that's not a joke. That's just a misunderstanding.
Exactly.
So about the actual title though.
Of Ween.
Of the catcher on the ride.
We should tell people about that
because I didn't know until the yesterday, I guess.
Yeah, this is also a spoiler.
So if you don't want to know,
then don't listen to this part.
Go ahead.
Is it a spoiler?
Sure, because it's in the book.
Oh, it is. Okay, forget it.
Forget it. Just read the book, everybody. No, no, no, you should, you should say it, because I think
people that are like, I don't want a bother. Please tell me. Oh, okay. Well, then the people who
don't want a bother. So the catcher on the rye is taken from a Robert Burns poem where he talks about
when a body meets a body coming through the rye, when a little body catch a body, will somebody die?
I think that's how it ends.
At the very least that's how David Niven sings it in murder by death. But what he's referring to
is the catcher and the rye is him. He's catching little kids from going off a cliff, little kids playing
in a field of rye. And as they're at their most free and reckless in their abandonment, they
are in danger of going off this cliff which would be becoming adults losing their childhood
and he sees himself as the catcher, the person catching them from going off that cliff so
that they can remain children or innocent, essentially, forever. Nice summation.
Thank you.
Thank you, Cliff's notes.
We should do one on Cliff's notes.
I always wondered who Cliff was.
Great, great idea.
Maybe we'll take a break here in a minute, but we'll just finish by saying that over
the next decade after Catcher, he's publishing other things, but that is when things got
started to get
a little weird for him and that he was a sensation and there were reporters knocking on a
store and he was just receiving tons and tons of mail from kids who thought he was this
guru and like the sage delivering wisdom to like a younger generation and all these other
younger writers were inspired to take up writing and it was just a little too much for
someone who was seeking solitude and spiritual enlightenment. So we will take a
break and let you know what happened right after this. Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show.
Brought to you by I Heart Podcasts.
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The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner. Rob called me, Soledad O' Brian and ask me what I knew about this crime. I know 60 years later, new leads are still emerging.
To me, an award-winning journalist, that's the making of an incredible story.
And on this podcast, you're going to hear it told by one of America's greatest storytellers.
Well, last, who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president?
My dad, 5JFK, screwed us at the Bay of Pigs,
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We'll reveal why Lee Harvey Oswald isn't who they said he was.
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I Heart Radio. Good. Alright, so when we left, JD Salinger was a literary sensation.
The walls were closing in on him as far as his privacy and his sort of search for spirituality.
His anonymity?
Well, I don't think he wanted to be anonymous necessarily
because he published work, but he definitely wanted privacy.
If he wanted to be anonymous, he would have published
under a pen name, I would imagine.
Truman Capote.
In 53, though, he bought a 90 acre property
in Cornish, New Hampshire.
It's about four hours from Manhattan,
a very lovely, quiet, farming community New Hampshire. It's about four hours from Manhattan, a very
lovely, quiet, farming community back then. It probably still is. And he left. But Dave
is keen to point out, and as our biographers of Sarah and Jer, this wasn't him saying,
I'm removing myself from the world. I'm going to be a recluse. He just wanted to get out
of the hustle and bustle and live the quiet life. He had friends there. He went into town and got his mail. He went in eight.
The local lunch place called Harrington Spa. He had friends, he had adult friends. He also had teenage friends,
which we'll get into the problematic nature of that later. But there was a group of teenagers from the high school there.
He was in his early 30s and he had connected
with young people in his life and that's why he could write in that voice so easily, I
think. And he just, you know, they thought he was one of the gang and they loved his advice
and so they would kind of all hang out here and there. And so it's not like he disappeared
completely at that point.
No, he didn't need to. He just was getting away from the people who really wanted something from him.
And instead, he introduced himself to a place
where he could just be Jerry, basically.
And it's not like the people there did know who he was.
They just weren't necessarily a starstruck
or seeking him as a guru like other people were.
And people would still come visit him from time to time.
He was known to sometimes just be like, look,
I'm not a guru. I don't know anything that you don't know. I just wrote a book. I can't
give you anything to answering the door with a shotgun, you know, and being like, get
off my property. It depended, I'm sure, on his mood. But he had, he had fashioned a
life for himself, and he wasn't the recluse that he's famous for now, like you were saying. There was actually one specific incident
that triggered that reclusiveness
that hadn't been there before.
And he stayed in Cornish,
he didn't move from Cornish,
but if a person can withdraw from the world
more than he had by moving to Cornish,
he did it masterfully.
And it all is to blame on a girl named Shirley Blaney.
Yeah, so she was a teenager who worked for the school newspaper or wrote for the school
newspaper and said, kind of interview you for the school newspaper.
And he did not do press at all, but he was like, sure, I'll do this thing for the local
school paper.
And because he, you know, he believed in that kind of thing, instead it was published in the regional newspaper,
the Daily Eagle Twin State Telescope,
and that was it for him.
He was like, I can't even trust this kid
to interview me for a school paper.
Everybody wants something for me.
It's unforgivable, it was a betrayal,
and so that was it.
He built a fence around his property. He quit going into town
He quit throwing and going to parties
When those his little teenager buddies would come around to hang out
He wouldn't come to the dorny more and that's when his life as the recluse started
Even though his son Matt will say
You know all this is written about his reclusiveness
and he just didn't want to be around.
I mean, that's what a recluse is,
but he said they made it out to be like,
he was just this crazy hermit,
and he was like, he just didn't wanna be bothered,
and he just wanted to write without all the noise.
Yeah.
Was his son's take.
But his social life seems to have been
definitely objectively curtailed after that.
Like he was much more social up until that point.
Oh, no one doubts that.
Yeah, his famous quote was Shirley Blaney, a real phony.
Was it really?
No.
It wouldn't surprise me.
It would be great.
So he becomes that kind of reclucent to some people that was like, oh, we got it, we got it really find them now.
There was a 1961 life article on them,
where they, the, I guess the author came to his house
and took pictures of his mailbox, got a picture of him working
in his yard, like really intrusive stuff.
People felt like, okay, with doing that,
just because he was a recluse, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
And that's a really difficult thing to deal with for him,
but he still sought connection with certain people.
I think it was just, you had to earn his trust
or he had to find you attractive.
Yeah, this is a pretty small circle uh... he
got together with the young woman they cleared Douglas uh... they had met when
she was sixteen
and he was thirty two
and they kept in touch via letters and things and they started dating when she was
nineteen
uh... at radcliffe uh... student radcliffe
um... they
bonded over religion
uh... you mentioned early the uh... and Hinduism. That is what they
really got into at that point. And he really immersed himself into sort of that sort of religious study
and philosophy and the basic tenets of which are that God is in everything, God is everywhere,
God is you, God is me, that kind of thing, very George Harrison, I think.
Yeah, but like, at least a decade before George Harrison
was ever exposed to this stuff.
Like this guy was doing this in like the mid 50s.
Oh, okay, I thought it was in the 60s.
Like he and Claire got married in 1955.
So like he was into it in the mid-50s at the latest.
So yeah, he was definitely into that.
And his son, I think no, no, his daughter,
who will meet in a second, later said that she believes
that he got over his head essentially.
He took it all to too much to heart
and he turned his back on the world
and became a quote, strange man because of the degree to which he exposed himself to religion. I
get the impression it doesn't matter what the religion was. It was the degree.
Yeah. I mean, his kids have two different takes. His daughter Margaret would write a book
that was not very flattering said that, you said that he basically held my mom hostage there.
He did disturbing things, he drank urine,
he spoke in tongues.
He became a very strange man that she didn't recognize.
And this is, she'd grown up really loving her father,
whereas Matt Salinger, who played Captain America.
No. And the 1990 played Captain America. No.
And the 1990 film Captain America.
Really?
And was in Revenge of the Nerds.
Which, who was the InRevenge of the Nerds?
He was one of the guys in the...
The Frat?
The hot frat.
Yeah, with Booger and Stone.
Not the Nerds, right?
Overture and...
Yeah, yeah, in the bathroom.
Married with you.
No, Ted, what was this last thing? Oh, I don't remember. He's great though.h from Merid. No, Ted was his last. Oh, I
don't remember. He's great,
though. I love that guy.
Wonderful. But yeah, Matt
Salon Joe's an actor and
producer for a while. Um, but
he, he says that his
sisters, there's a great
article from the Guardian
from a few years ago, 2019, I
think, with Matt, where he
said his sister Margaret, he
loves her and respects her,
but he says those accounts are gothic tales.
So, it's kind of one of those things where two kids have two different takes on their
famous slash weird parent.
Right.
But I mean, like, those are pretty odds with one another, pretty diametrical, you know?
I agree.
I don't think Matt said he was some great dad either because he would he built a bunker basically to write in a writing studio and
Was not a doting father and you know writing was his most important thing
He used to say do not disturb me unless this unless the house is burning down like leave me alone family
So I can do my important work. So two things one
It's Teb McGinley
to two things. One, it's tab mgginly. Two, the image of JD Salinger that people popularly
hold is still very much widespread, the one that they've held forever essentially since
he became a recluse, but like a brilliant writer and blah, blah, blah. I guess a different kind of piggy-esque view that his daughter has of him started to
emerge in the 90s.
Peggy wrote a book called Dreamcatcher, which you mentioned.
I think it came out in 2000.
Who's Peggy?
Peggy is his daughter, Margaret.
Oh, that was her nickname.
And in the book, she talks at length about how her mother was treated.
And her mother was that ragcliff, coed, Claire, right?
Is it Claire Douglas?
Yes, Claire Douglas.
And apparently, JD Salinger drove Claire Douglas to the brink of its entity. They got divorced in 1967. And according to her
side of the story, he was extremely emotionally abusive
to her. He would tell her that he didn't love her. He made
her live in this, it wasn't necessarily her choice to live
without heat or hot water and grow their own food and be quiet
Because we're we're thinking about you know enlightenment like she went along with it because she was
19 and he was in his early mid-30s
so
His the stuff that has come out about him starting in about the late 90s, and then continuing on as different women
in his life over time have kind of come forward
and been like, yes, and there's also this.
There's not like a smoking gun, right?
It's not like anything like on a Harvey Weinstein level,
but his image has definitely turned a little bit
because it has become clear that he used his age and experience as an older person
to control and manipulate younger girls to his to often their detriment for his short-term
pleasure essentially. Yeah, absolutely. It seemed like the move was like, I mean, it's called grooming is what the word we use today,
but find someone in their mid teens and begin a friendship with them and write letters
and pay them a lot of attention and stuff like that, and then try and get together with
them at least or get together with them in a physical way when they're legally able to do so.
So that happened a few different times.
There was a 14 year old named Jean Miller.
He was 30 at the time.
He pursued her via friendship and letters.
And then when they, when she was 19, they had sexual intercourse and he dumped her immediately
afterward.
She came out and wrote about it. After
he died, she said that she didn't want to write about it while he was still alive. And then he
eventually started dating a freshman at Yale named Joyce Maynard. In 1998, she wrote a lot about their
relationship. I think they were together about a year, said he was very manipulative and that he would take advantage of naive young women.
And then I believe he finally married, remarried again in 92.
He was a two-woman named Kalino Neal.
She was, she was like my age basically at the time, she was 21 years old and he was 69
years old.
And they stayed married for what, what, 18 years until he died.
Yeah, and she was a nurse, and apparently was also a bit of a nurse to him as well as a wife
from what I can tell, like a good example I saw, was that he had gone very much
deaf, essentially, very hard of hearing, but he was too vain to wear a hearing aid,
so she would have to repeat to him in a louder voice with somebody, you know, had just said to him when they were
out and about in town or whatever. Right. So, you know, 21-year-old, 69-year-old type
stuff. But she apparently is, I guess, the least affected of all of his wives or girlfriends, she is co-trusty of his
work with his son Matt.
So she's still very much in the JD Salinger, Pro Salinger camp clearly.
But I guess the antithesis to her would be Joyce Maynard, who was the freshman at Yale. And she has written about their relationship
so much that people have come to look at her
as an opportunist, somebody who's basically just trading
on the one year she's spent with JD Salinger.
She's been trying to make money off of that
or get fame or publicity off of it for years.
Another interpretation that's kind of come around lately is that she's been telling the story of a victim who was manipulated
by an older man. And when you dig into her story, she was like suddenly the hot New York
literary, literary it girl, all of a sudden, when they met, she had just been on the cover
of New York magazine, on the cover, with a cover story,
but they also put her picture on the cover. And he got in touch with her and said,
like, hey, I think you're writing great. And they started to write letters back and forth.
He convinced her to drop out of Yale with just a few months before graduating
to give up her job working as a New York Times writer, which she just got.
And to blow off a book tour that was going
to start her career and instead move to Cornish New Hampshire with him. And she did. She was 19 at the time,
very much like Claire Douglas. And at the very least, even if he wasn't overtly manipulating her,
like her life went off the rails because she got involved with this incredibly revered older man who she thought
loved her.
And after a year, he was done with her and she moved out.
Apparently it was over.
Kids are something ostensibly.
She wanted kids he didn't and they were like, no, this isn't going to work.
But yeah, Joyce Maider has gone through a bit of a reform over the last several years, at least
as far as some people are concerned.
Yeah, absolutely.
And you mentioned Techbrows buying things.
Maynard, she sold 14, she auctioned 14 personal letters from Salinger and Peter Norton of
Norton Antivirus bought them for $200,000.
He offered to give them back to JD Salinger or to burn them.
I think wasn't even answered, so he just locked them up. I think still has possession of them.
Yeah, and supposedly that was a dime. A dozen kind of thing. Other women came forward and was like,
I had treasured letters that he wrote to me too. He's become a study in one of those things where it's like, okay, this guy was a little
more complicated and like you said, at the outset problematic than anyone knew or realized.
And yet his work is still just as amazing as it was before.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I mean, he quit publishing completely. And like I said kept writing and in one later interview
He did not do many but he said there's a marvelous piece and not publishing. It's peaceful still
Publishing is a terrible invasion of my privacy. I like to write. I loved to write
But I write just for myself in my own pleasure. I pay for this kind of attitude
I know I'm known as strange, as a strange aloof kind of man, but all I'm doing is trying to protect
myself in my work.
And that article with Matt Salinger, like there is a lot of work that he did.
And Matt Salinger is going to publish some of it.
Apparently he was directed to publish some of it.
I read article years ago, right after he died died where they said between 2010 and 2015 there
will be five new novels and none of that has happened yet.
Nothing has come out.
And Matt Salinger is just like, it's going to take as long as it's going to take.
There's tons of stuff and I respect my father's work and we're never going to license stuff.
You're never going to see a catcher in the right coffee mug.
It's not gonna be a movie, but like,
I wanna publish this stuff correctly
and that takes a lot, a lot of time and like back off.
Yeah.
So what else you got, anything else?
I got nothing else.
I mean, new stuff's gonna come out at some point.
Very curious to see what that looks like. I bet some will be about the glass family
I think for sure that was the family and many of those short stories that he wrote about recurring characters
Franny and Zoey and stuff like that. So imagine there's more glass family stuff in there. I think that's been confirmed
Dave turned up a really great analysis of JD Salinger's writing by a guy named Michiko Kakutani.
It's really insightful and also just as approachable as JD Salinger's writing is really, really good stuff.
So I thought it was a pretty good introduction to JD Salinger and the whole, it takes a look at the whole, his whole career from how
lauded it was to how it kind of at the end, some of the last stuff he published, people
were like, what's going on here?
This is a little odd, you know what I mean?
Yeah, send me that, I like to check that.
I will send it to you.
Since Chuck asked me to send something and we're out of stuff to talk about, JD Soundger, I think that means it's time for a listener mail.
I'm going to call this Red Stripe confirmation for Joshers. Hey guys, you mentioned Red
Stripe beer on the recent episode about Scuba and reminded me of a story, orc to the country
club in Granger, Indiana as a banquet chef. I think's a shift. I know it's not a shift, by the way.
We did a Caribbean Island theme event for the members
and the bar manager.
And the bar manager ordered a couple of cases of red stripe
told the bartenders to push it so it would sell through.
The first guy to a bottle tasted it and said it was terrible.
Instead of the bar and told everyone not to get it,
we only sold two bottles.
A few months later, we an immeasurable event.
Just after it was in the movie The Firm, where two guys were drinking it before they went
scuba diving as part of an escape plan as Josh mentioned.
The barge-in is where asked again to push the red stripe, and I was putting on appetizers
and one of the first guys to come off the golf course said, hey, that's that beer they
were drinking in that movie.
And he said it was pretty good and was telling his buddies about the movie and red stripe
and it sold out in an hour.
Same group of people, but that recognition from the movie really helped sell the beer.
So Josh was right.
Never underestimate the power of marketing.
And that is from Steve.
Thanks, Steve.
I love it when I'm right.
I especially love it when people write into tell me I was right,
you know?
Good stuff.
If you want to be like Steve and tell me that I was right,
bring it on.
You can send it via email to stuffpodcast.it.heartradio.com. Staff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the I Heart Radio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Toss show. I'll be interviewing people that I find interesting, so not celebrities. And certainly not comedians. We'll be covering topics like religion, travel, sports, gambling.
But mostly it will be about being a working mother. If you're looking for a podcast that will
educate and inspire, or one that will really make you think, this isn't the one for you.
Listen to Toss Show in the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy
is the greatest murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me,
so would Ed O'Brien and asked me what I knew about this crime.
Well, ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president.
Then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Mary K. McBrayer, host of the podcast, The Greatest True Crime Stories Ever Told,
where I dig into crimes where a woman is not just a victim.
She might be the detective, the lawyer, the witness, the coroner, the criminal, or some combination of those roles.
These are the stories we need to know, to understand the intersection of society, justice, and the fascinating workings of the human psyche.
Listen to the greatest true-crime stories ever told, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
The free iHeartRadio app is your home for the holidays.
Open the app and click on the holiday banner,
or search iHeartHoliday and start listening
to your local holiday station.
Plus stations play in all kinds of holiday music,
Christmas classics, Christmas jazz, country R&B, tons of
playlists, even podcasts. Our gift to you, the perfect holiday soundtrack. Join the millions
of listeners on the iHeart Radio app. Free never sounded so good.
you