Home > A Perfect Day for Bananafish Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Salinger's Story
A Perfect Day for Bananafish | Salinger's Story
In this essay, the author argues that Salinger's story trivializes the very subject it is meant to explore.
If suicide isn't at the top of the list of compelling infirmities for creative men, the suicide poet or artist, one can't help noticing, has always been given a very considerable amount of avid attention.—Buddy Glass, discussing his older brother in Seymour: An Introduction
Partly because of the shock value of its ending and partly because Salinger is an author whose withdrawal from the world gives all his work the stamp of ‘‘serious art," "A Perfect Day for Bananafish'' is often puzzled over by students and critics with all the reverence of...
[The entire page is 2012 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Introduction
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Summary
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: J. D. Salinger Biography
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Themes
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Style
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Historical Context
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Critical Overview
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Character Analysis
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Essays and Criticism
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Compare and Contrast
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Topics for Further Study
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: What Do I Read Next?
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Bibliography and Further Reading
- A Perfect Day for Bananafish: Pictures
- Copyright
Related Topics
Tell a friend about A Perfect Day for Bananafish at eNotes.
