The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Tuesday, May 21, 2013
 
Trove of Previously Unseen Letters Written by J.D. Salinger Reveal His Human Side
In this image made available Wednesday Jan. 26, 2011, by the University of East Anglia, Donald Hartog and J.D. Salinger, right, pose together in London in 1989, when they met for the first time since 1938. A trove of letters written by Salinger to British friend Donald Hartog reveals a sociable man who took bus trips to Niagara Falls, ate fast-food hamburgers, enjoyed watching Tim Henman play tennis - and claimed always to be writing new work. The letters were written to Don Hartog, who met Salinger in 1938 when both were teenagers, sent by their families to study German in Vienna. They corresponded after returning home - Salinger to try his hand as a writer, Hartog eventually to go into the food import-export business. AP Photo/Salinger Collection, University of East Anglia.

By: Jill Lawless, Associated Press

LONDON (AP).- He had a reputation as a literary recluse, but a trove of previously unseen letters written by J.D. Salinger to a British friend reveals a sociable man who took bus trips to Niagara Falls, ate fast-food hamburgers, enjoyed watching tennis and claimed always to be writing new work.

The 50 letters and four postcards have been donated to a British university, which made them public Thursday on the first anniversary of the author's death at the age of 91. They show that the enigmatic writer of "The Catcher in the Rye" was an affectionate friend who enjoyed gardening, trips to the theater and church suppers — and thought one restaurant chain's burgers were better than the rest.

Chris Bigsby, professor of American studies at the letters' new home, the University of East Anglia, said they challenge Salinger's image as a near-hermit holed up in his New England home.

"These letters show a completely different man," Bigbsy said. "This is a man who goes on (bus) parties to Nantucket or Niagara or the Grand Canyon and enjoys chatting to people along the way.

"He goes to art galleries and theater and travels to London to see (Alan) Ayckbourn and (Anton) Chekhov plays. He was out and about."

The letters were written to Donald Hartog, a Londoner who met Salinger in 1938 when both were teenagers in Vienna, sent by their families to learn German. They corresponded after returning home — Salinger to try his hand as a writer, Hartog eventually going into the food import-export business.

The pair wrote to one another during World War II — in which Salinger fought as a soldier in the U.S. Army — but after a few years the friendship lapsed. Hartog's daughter Frances said her father burned those early letters while clearing out the house prior to a move.

"When we were kids it was sort of a joke — 'My dad knew Salinger and burnt the letters,'" she said. "He was de-cluttering. He said, 'I looked at them and just thought, this guy's not going anywhere.'"

Hartog's literary judgment was wrong. Salinger became a celebrity when "Catcher in the Rye" was published in 1951. The story of the angry but articulate 16-year-old Holden Caulfield has sold more than 35 million copies and remains a classic portrait of youthful rebellion.

The novel's success drove the attention-shy Salinger even further from the limelight. For several decades he lived quietly in tiny Cornish, New Hampshire, whose inhabitants took pride in protecting his privacy and seeing off interlopers. He gave few interviews and published relatively little.

His last book, "Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour," came out in 1963. His last published work, the short story "Hapworth 16, 1924," appeared in The New Yorker in 1965.

Hartog reached his old friend after the publication of an unauthorized biography of Salinger in the 1980s. They began writing to one another regularly, and in 1989 Salinger traveled to Britain for Hartog's 70th birthday. The two friends went to the theater and visited a zoo, and Salinger met Hartog's three children.

"I remember being not very keen on meeting him because I liked his writing and I was afraid it might spoil it," said Frances Hartog.

She needn't have worried. Salinger "was very relaxed, very genial and genuinely interested in my father and in us."

Frances Hartog found the letters in a drawer after her father died in 2007. The family donated them to the University of East Anglia in Norwich, eastern England, which has well-regarded American studies and creative writing departments.

The university says it will make them available to researchers and members of the public on request.

After Salinger's death, neighbors recalled him as an amiable and unassuming fixture in town, different from the recluse he appeared in memoirs by his daughter and a former lover, Joyce Maynard.

The letters to Hartog — addressed to "Don" and signed "Jerry" — help flesh out that picture. They are not the only surviving letters by Salinger, but they cover a period late in his life when he was at his most elusive.

Frances Hartog said she can see Salinger's literary style — "casual, conversational but very direct" — in the letters. But their fascination lies in their small, everyday details. The eminent author enjoyed listening to the Three Tenors — Jose Carreras was his favorite. He liked watching tennis and admired John McEnroe — as well as Tim Henman, the perennially underperforming British player.

And he thought Burger King hamburgers were better than those from other chains.

The letters do little to solve one Salinger mystery — did he leave behind a hoard of unpublished work? He is rumored to have left a stack of finished, unpublished manuscripts in a safe in his house in Cornish. A year after his death nothing has appeared, and his publisher and literary representatives remain silent.

Bigsby said the letters are full of references to writing — but are frustratingly short on detail. At one point, Salinger mentioned a plan to expand "Hapworth" into a book. It never materialized.

"It's clear from the letters that Salinger was writing all the time," Bigby said. "He says how he's been working all these years and it's such a relief not to have to worry about publication because publication is a distraction.

"If he was telling his friend the truth, there should be an awful lot of material. But he doesn't say what it is."


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

January 26, 2011

Mexican Archaeologists Permanently Place Stone Slab of Maya Ruler Pakal on Sarcophagus

Plate Painted by Pablo Picasso Donated to Ransom Center by Photojournalist Duncan

Sotheby's Forthcoming Contemporary Art Evening Sale to Debut Ai Weiwei's 'Sunflower Seeds' at Auction

Richard P. Townsend Steps Down as President and CEO of the Museum of Latin American Art

Eighty Images by Vivian Maier from the 50's and 60's at Hilaneh von Kories Gallery

New Exhibit Unveiled in Royal Ontario Museum's Patricia Harris Gallery of Textiles & Costume

New Museum Presents First Major United States Survey of Works by George Condo

Mile-Long Floating Walkway Above the Thames to Open Up London's Hidden Past

Virginia Historian Thomas P. Lowry Denies Tampering with Abraham Lincoln Pardon

From North Korea Propaganda to Art Exhibit in Seoul, Defector Song Byeok Shows His Work

Perot Museum of Nature & Science in Dallas Receives $25 Million Gift from The Rees-Jones Foundation

Last of Frank Lloyd Wright-Trained Architects, Edgar Tafel, Dies in New York at Age 98

Show-Stopping Installation by acrylicize Recently Unveiled at The Engine Group's Headquarters

New Online Archive Brings the Ancient Maya City of Chichen Itza to Scholars' Desktops

Extremely Rare Keats Love Letter Heads for Sale of Major Papers and Portraits at Bonhams

Dallas Museum of Art Filming Video Series that will Premiere on YouTube in February

Musée de l'Elysée in Lausanne Acquires Charlie Chaplin Photographic Archive

Beijing Voice: Together or Isolated, Contemporary Chinese Art at Pace Gallery in Beijing

Clearing Work Completed by Israel Antiquities Authority on a Second Temple Period Water Channel

Dallas Museum of Art Publishes Ignite the Power of Art: Advancing Visitor Engagement in Museums

Falmouth Art Gallery to Display Newly Acquired Tacita Dean Works

Al Hirschfeld's Chair, Desk Going to Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center

U.S. Section of International Association of Art Critics Announces Annual Award Winners

Property from the Collection of Charles Ryskamp Exceeds High Estimate to Bring $1.6 Million

Crystal Bridges Hires Director of Member and Guest Services

Portland Art Museum Announces Finalists for the Contemporary Northwest Art Awards

The 2011 AIA Thomas Jefferson Award for Public-sector architects: James Binkley, FAIA

New York Lawmakers Call for 9/11 Coin Crackdown

Chinese and South American Rarities Lead $9.28+ Million NYINC World & Ancient Coins Event at Heritage Auctions

January 25, 2011

Germany's Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation Refuses to Return Nefertiti Bust to Egypt

Clearing Work Completed by Israel Antiquities Authority on a Second Temple Period Water Channel

Beijing Voice: Together or Isolated, Contemporary Chinese Art at Pace Gallery in Beijing

Musée de l'Elysée in Lausanne Acquires Charlie Chaplin Photographic Archive

Flash, Superman, Green Lantern from $1 Million+ Collection Headline Huge Comics Event at Heritage Auctions

Van Gogh, Other Artistic Masterpieces on Display at Radford University Art Museum

Two California Groups Want Historic Decommissioned Navy Ship as a Tourist Attraction

Dallas Museum of Art Filming Video Series that will Premiere on YouTube in February

Extremely Rare Keats Love Letter Heads for Sale of Major Papers and Portraits at Bonhams

New Online Archive Brings the Ancient Maya City of Chichen Itza to Scholars' Desktops

Perot Museum of Nature & Science in Dallas Receives $25 Million Gift from The Rees-Jones Foundation

Show-Stopping Installation by acrylicize Recently Unveiled at The Engine Group's Headquarters

Last of Frank Lloyd Wright-Trained Architects, Edgar Tafel, Dies in New York at Age 98

Exhibition Features Works Artists Submitted to Exchange with Sol LeWitt

A Gathering Quiet: Metalpoint Paintings and Drawings by Susan Schwalb at Galerie Mourlot

Kunsthalle Basel Presents First Major Solo Exhibition in Switzerland of Works by Artist Bettina Pousttchi

Sotheby's Announces the Dedicated Auction of What Modern Is: The Collection of Mark McDonald

Rare Andy Warhol Self Portrait to Go Under Hammer a Christie's in New York

After 222 Years, First Draft of a Poem by Robert Burns, is Found in Castle in Scotland

New iPad Application Tells John F. Kennedy's Story Fifty Years After Inauguration

Comfortably Above Low Estimate, Sotheby's Americana Week Brings $14.4 Million

First Show, Since 2005, of Recent Work by Ellen Gallagher at Gagosian in New York

Santa Monica Museum of Art Presents Daniel Cummings: Recent Paintings

Newly Acquired Grayson Perry Works to Be Shown in Manchester

KUB Arena Presents Living Archives in Cooperation with the Van Abbemuseum

Major Commissions Awarded to Ground-Breaking Program for Disabled Artists

Illustrious Designers, New Collectors and Philanthropists Gather at Young Collectors Night at the Winter Antiques Show

January 24, 2011

Mary McCartney Opens First Solo Show in Germany at Contributed, Studio for the Arts

First Show, Since 2005, of Recent Work by Ellen Gallagher at Gagosian in New York

Egyptian Government Officially Asks Berlin to Return 3,300-Year-Old Bust of Queen Nefertiti

Comfortably Above Low Estimate, Sotheby's Americana Week Brings $14.4 Million

Flash, Superman, Green Lantern from $1 Million+ Collection Headline Huge Comics Event at Heritage Auctions

Van Gogh, Other Artistic Masterpieces on Display at Radford University Art Museum

Two California Groups Want Historic Decommissioned Navy Ship as a Tourist Attraction

Sotheby's Announces the Dedicated Auction of What Modern Is: The Collection of Mark McDonald

Santa Monica Museum of Art Presents First Museum Exhibition by Daniel Cummings

Kunsthalle Basel Presents First Major Solo Exhibition in Switzerland of Works by Artist Bettina Pousttchi

Art Lovers Queue through Night for Glimpse of Monet at the Grand Palais in Paris

Landmark Exhibition of John Marin's Revolutionary Watercolors in Major Art Institute Exhibition

Clark Art Institute Investigates European Portraiture in the Exhibition Eye to Eye

New Works by Toronto-Based Artist Ray Caesar at Jonathan LeVine Gallery

International Center of Photography Opens Wang Qingsong: When Worlds Collide

Drawings and Photographs from the Collection of Designer Kasper at the Morgan Library

Nordic Water Tales by Susanna Majuri at Galerie Adler

Solo Exhibition of Sculptures, Paintings and Drawings by Jun Kaneko Opens in Cincinnati

Vlatka Horvat Opens the Spring Season at Bergen Kunsthall with Major Installation

Exhibition by William Eggleston Transforms Ordinary Moments into Indelible Images

Malmo-Based Artist Christian Andersson Presents His Largest Show Ever at Moderna Museet

Retrospective of 40 Years of Richard Deacon's Work Opens at the Sprengel Museum

New York City Museum and Visitor Center to Display Brooklyn Navy Yard's 200-Year History

Art Dubai Projects to Feature New Work by More than 75 Artists in 2011 Edition

Audio-Visual Exploration of Myth and Reality in Tijuana Subject of New Exhibition

Images Inspired by Ed Ruscha's Admitted Love of Driving at Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Ida Kay Greathouse, Director Emerita of the Frye Art Museum, Dies

Conquer the Tower at Windsor Castle: A New Tour Launches this Summer

January 23, 2011

Lost Lavishly-Illustrated Vatican Manuscripts Go on Display at the Meadows Museum

Early Pioneers of Abstraction Explored in Gallery's Remarkable Collection

Tod's Founder Diego Della Valle to Restore Rome's Colosseum for $34 Million

Agony and Ecstasy: A Rediscovered Masterpiece on View at Moretti Fine Art, NY

Exhibition of Superlative British Watercolors at the Museum of Fine Arts, Saint Petersburg

18th Century Mahogany Bureau Table Achieves a Stunning $5.7 Million at Christie's

Camera Work in Berlin Exhibits the Photographs of Nadav Kander and Robert Polidori

RM Auctions Kicks Off 2011 Calendar with Strong Start and Record $30.8 Million Arizona Sale

Italian Artist Roberto Cuoghi's First Solo Show in the U.S. Opens at the Hammer

Exhibition of Menswear Explores Men's Fashion from the 18th Century to the Present

National Gallery of Art to Remove and Reinstall East Building Facade Veneer through 2014

Al Taylor: Wire Instruments and Pet Stains at the Santa Monica Museum of Art

Jasper, Texas: The Community Photographs of Alonzo Jordan at the ICP in New York

Colorado University Art Museum Opens Four Concurrent Exhibitions

The Katonah Museum of Art Presents Drawn/Taped/Burned: Abstraction on Paper

Katonah Art Center Hosts Faculty Art Exhibit 2011

Inside Art: Creative Responses to the National Gallery's Collection by Young Offenders

Asians Toast Lloyd Webber's Wines in $5.6 Million Sale

$1 Million Gift Announced by School of the Art Institute of Chicago

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Appoints New Director of Development

January 22, 2011

Royal Academy Opens Exhibition that Examines British Sculpture of the 20th Century

Dialogue between the Sculptors Julio González and David Smith at IVAM in Valencia

Finding Would Reveal Contact between Humans and Gomphotheres in North America

Smithsonian Chief Wayne Clough Says Banned Video by David Wojnarowicz a Work of Art

Magnificent Qing Monochrome Porcelains from the Gordon Collection at Christie's New York

Kunsthaus Bregenz Presents Exhibition by the South Korean Artist Haegue Yang

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Names Harry Philbrick as Director of Museum

The Diary: Three Centuries of Private Lives on View at The Morgan Library and Museum

Cyprus' Orthodox Christian Church Thanks Singer Boy George for Icon's Return

£2 Million Gift from the Hintze Family Charitable Foundation Received by The National Gallery

New Salvador Dali Museum is the Centerpiece of Arts-Filled Tampa Bay Area

130 Belgian and International Exhibitors at this Year's Brussels Antiques & Fine Arts Fair

Los Angeles County Museum of Art Appoints Curators to Chinese and Korean Art Department

New Library Collection Make Birmingham Museum of Art a Draw for International Study

Hicksted Place, Home of British Showjumping, to Sell Wine Cellar at Bonhams

Take Me to the Water: Photographs of River Baptism at International Center of Photography

U.S. Returns Stolen Impressionist Painting to France

Hand-Sculpted Goat Atop a Stack of Packing Crates Presented as Winner of Spitalfields Sculpture Prize

Oakland Museum Awarded NEA Grant for Exhibition on Famed Modernist Jeweler

January 21, 2011

Iconic 19th Century Orientalist Painting by Jean Léon Gérôme Creates Pre-Auction Buzz

Dialogue between the Sculptors Julio González and David Smith at IVAM in Valencia

Finding Would Reveal Contact between Humans and Gomphotheres in North America

Smithsonian Chief Wayne Clough Says Banned Video by David Wojnarowicz a Work of Art

Magnificent Qing Monochrome Porcelains from the Gordon Collection at Christie's New York

Kunsthaus Bregenz Presents Exhibition by the South Korean Artist Haegue Yang

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Names Harry Philbrick as Director of Museum

The Diary: Three Centuries of Private Lives on View at The Morgan Library and Museum

Cyprus' Orthodox Christian Church Thanks Singer Boy George for Icon's Return

£2 Million Gift from the Hintze Family Charitable Foundation Received by The National Gallery

New Salvador Dali Museum is the Centerpiece of Arts-Filled Tampa Bay Area

130 Belgian and International Exhibitors at this Year's Brussels Antiques & Fine Arts Fair

Los Angeles County Museum of Art Appoints Curators to Chinese and Korean Art Department

Gagosian Gallery Presents a Mise-en-Scène of New Paintings by Piotr Uklański

VIP Art Fair: World's First Online Art Fair Launches Its Inaugural Edition on Saturday

Nailya Alexander Gallery Presents The Extra/Ordinary World of Pentti Sammallahti

Check Mate: Chess Sets from Around the World Exceed Estimates at Bonhams

Nicolas Krupp Contemporary Art Presents the Documentary Allegory of Peter Friedl

Museum Recovers $50K Civil War Gun Stolen in 1975

Pilar Luna, Pioneer of Mexican Underwater Archaeology, Given J.C. Harrington Award

John Beech: The State of Things on Display at Peter Blum Gallery in Chelsea

Smithsonian Secretary Wayne Clough Defends Decision to Remove Controversial Video

The World's Greatest Toy and Train Collection Now on View for the First Time at Sotheby's

Seattle Art Museum's Picasso Exhibition Surpasses 400,000 Visitors, Breaks Record

The Famous Thames Whale Goes on Display at the Natural History Museum at Tring

New Dinosaur Hall to Create Landmark Experience at Natural History Museum of Los Angeles

Exhibition of Photographs by Dorothea Lange at Brigham Young University Museum of Art

Cain Schulte Starts the New Year with Exhibitions by Matthew Barney and Sandra Munzel

Rosenbach Museum & Library to Deaccession Paintings by Walter Greaves

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site