Review:
John Leonard "CBS News Sunday Morning Margaret A. Salinger has written a memoir that would break the heart even if her father weren't the reclusive author of "The Catcher in the Rye. Maybe there's a gene for splendid prose. "Buffalo Art News" "Buffalo Art News" I found myself gaining personal insights from this book that applied to me both as a son and as a father. I could not ask for much more than that. There are, I believe, lessons here for all of us. "The New York Times" Salinger's daughter's truths are as mesmerizing as his fiction....There is information here that can't help altering, and enlarging, our estimation of Salinger's work....This memoir may well prompt a reassessment of the place of Salinger's fiction in American literature, and add a dimension to the marginalized mystic he's become to many. "The Washington Post" Has just about everything you'd look for in a Salinger story. Clear writing. Edgy characters. A dash of death. A pinch of sex. A dollop of loneliness. And lots and lots of weirdness. "People" A controversial, emotionally charged memoir. John Leonard "CBS News Sunday Morning" Margaret A. Salinger has written a memoir that would break the heart even if her father weren't the reclusive author of "The Catcher in the Rye." Maybe there's a gene for splendid prose. "The Telegraph" (UK) Salinger's writing is vivid and strong. "The Jerusalem Report" Peggy's diverse achievements and experience make "Dream Catcher" unlike any memoir...darkly comic. "Academic Writing Review" Margaret A. Salinger's work shows the brilliance of what can happen when a woman's way of seeing is adroitly applied to a man's writing....Rarely does a memoir do so much to make readers reconsider a body of fiction by a well-known writer....This memoir has become one of the best books to surface in the world of Salinger criticism. "Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)" By fathering Margaret, or Peggy, America's best-known creator of precocious fictional siblings begot a daughter with a level of brilliance and moral fiber that has proved capable of taking on both the challenge of the flesh-and-blood J. D. Salinger and the mystique he has gone to vast lengths to cultivate....A master interpreter of her father's work, Peggy skillfully balances her incisive readings of the stories with her father's motives and behaviors. What makes it so remarkable is the brilliance with which, in describing the process of winning her own salvation, the author deconstructs the Salinger myth. "USA Today" An unprecedented look at one of the country's most admired and reclusive writers. Academic Writing Review Margaret A. Salinger's work shows the brilliance of what can happen when a woman's way of seeing is adroitly applied to a man's writing....Rarely does a memoir do so much to make readers reconsider a body of fiction by a well-known writer....This memoir has become one of the best books to surface in the world of Salinger criticism. Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) By fathering Margaret, or Peggy, America's best-known creator of precocious fictional siblings begot a daughter with a level of brilliance and moral fiber that has proved capable of taking on both the challenge of the flesh-and-blood J. D. Salinger and the mystique he has gone to vast lengths to cultivate....A master interpreter of her father's work, Peggy skillfully balances her incisive readings of the stories with her father's motives and behaviors. What makes it so remarkable is the brilliance with which, in describing the process of winning her own salvation, the author deconstructs the Salinger myth. The Jerusalem Report Peggy's diverse achievements and experience make Dream Catcher unlike any memoir...darkly comic. USA Today An unprecedented look at one of the country's most admired and reclusive writers. The Telegraph (UK) Salinger's writing is vivid and strong. Buffalo Art News I found myself gaining personal insights from this book that applied to me both as a son and as a father. I could not ask for much more than that. There are, I believe, lessons here for all of us. The New York Times Salinger's daughter's truths are as mesmerizing as his fiction....There is information here that can't help altering, and enlarging, our estimation of Salinger's work....This memoir may well prompt a reassessment of the place of Salinger's fiction in American literature, and add a dimension to the marginalized mystic he's become to many. John Leonard CBS News Sunday Morning Margaret A. Salinger has written a memoir that would break the heart even if her father weren't the reclusive author of The Catcher in the Rye. Maybe there's a gene for splendid prose. People A controversial, emotionally charged memoir. The Washington Post Has just about everything you'd look for in a Salinger story. Clear writing. Edgy characters. A dash of death. A pinch of sex. A dollop of loneliness. And lots and lots of weirdness. "Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)"By fathering Margaret, or Peggy, America's best-known creator of precocious fictional siblings begot a daughter with a level of brilliance and moral fiber that has proved capable of taking on both the challenge of the flesh-and-blood J. D. Salinger and the mystique he has gone to vast lengths to cultivate....A master interpreter of her father's work, Peggy skillfully balances her incisive readings of the stories with her father's motives and behaviors. What makes it so remarkable is the brilliance with which, in describing the process of winning her own salvation, the author deconstructs the Salinger myth. "The New York Times"Salinger's daughter's truths are as mesmerizing as his fiction....There is information here that can't help altering, and enlarging, our estimation of Salinger's work....This memoir may well prompt a reassessment of the place of Salinger's fiction in American literature, and add a dimension to the marginalized mystic he's become to many. "Academic Writing Review"Margaret A. Salinger's work shows the brilliance of what can happen when a woman's way of seeing is adroitly applied to a man's writing....Rarely does a memoir do so much to make readers reconsider a body of fiction by a well-known writer....This memoir has become one of the best books to surface in the world of Salinger criticism. John Leonard"CBS News Sunday Morning" Margaret A. Salinger has written a memoir that would break the heart even if her father weren't the reclusive author of "The Catcher in the Rye." Maybe there's a gene for splendid prose. "The Washington Post"Has just about everything you'd look for in a Salinger story. Clear writing. Edgy characters. A dash of death. A pinch of sex. A dollop of loneliness. And lots and lots of weirdness. "The Jerusalem Report"Peggy's diverse achievements and experience make "Dream Catcher" unlike any memoir...darkly comic. "USA Today"An unprecedented look at one of the country's most admired and reclusive writers. "The Telegraph" (UK)Salinger's writing is vivid and strong. "People"A controversial, emotionally charged memoir.
About the Author:
Margaret A. Salinger grew up in Cornish, New Hampshire. A Phi Beta Kappa scholar, she was graduated from Brandeis University summa cum laude, won the Saval-Sachar scholarship award for historical research, and was co-winner of the Lester Martin Foundation Award for the best thesis in legal studies. She earned an M.Phil. from Oxford University, and attended Harvard Divinity School as a Williams Scholar. She lives with her husband and son.
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