Historical Context
In
a sense, The Catcher in the Rye took J.D. Salinger thirty years to write. As
Salinger has admitted, Holden Caulfield is based in part upon his own
experiences growing up, and the first twenty years of Salinger’s life could be
considered research, with the next ten devoted to the conception and completion
of the novel. Salinger came from a well-off family, living like Caulfield’s on
Park Avenue, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Also like Caulfield, he
boarded at a Pennsylvania prep school.
After high school Salinger spent a year in Europe (mainly in Austria),
but returned home when Austria was invaded by Nazi Germany in 1938. He did not
graduate from college, but in 1939 took a course at Columbia taught by the
editor of Story, a distinguished
fiction magazine. In the next two years, Salinger had five stories accepted for
publication by major magazines and journals. One, called “A Slight Rebellion
Off Madison,” accepted by The New Yorker
in 1941, features a main character named Holden Morissey Caulfield, and
provides an early version of chapter 17 (in which Holden tries to talk Sally
into going to New England with him). Another story, called “I’m Crazy,”
was published in Collier’s in 1945
and became the basis for chapters 1, 2, and 17. The persona of Caulfield
developed through these and to a lesser degree many other stories Salinger
published in the ‘40s. Salinger apparently had a ninety-page Caulfield
novelette accepted for publication in 1945, but withdrew it prior to
publication, reworked it, and The Catcher
in the Rye finally was published in 1951.
The ‘40s were a tumultuous time for Salinger, and indeed, the world.
Salinger was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1942 and remained there until his
discharge in 1945, participating in the D Day assault on Utah Beach. During this
time he was hospitalized with a “nervous condition,” perhaps suggesting
Caulfield’s own condition. At the beginning of 1953, Salinger moved to
Cornish, New Hampshire, and commenced on a path of personal obscurity while The Catcher in the Rye became
ever more widely known. His last published story appeared in 1965, and he has
since averaged no more than two interviews per decade. Most of his early stories
have remained unpublished for decades (despite the evident demand filled in part
by numerous bootleg collections). Catcher, meanwhile, has become one of the twentieth century’s
bestselling literary works, while at the same time receiving “the most
attempts at being banned” (according to the American Library Association).
Salinger has continued to write, simply declining to publish (he has called
publishing “a vicious, vicious thing”), and accumulating a body of work to
be released after his death.