Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Franny and Zooey, J. D. Salinger - Anne Marple (essay date 1961)
Franny and Zooey, J. D. Salinger - Anne Marple (essay date 1961)
Anne Marple (essay date 1961)
SOURCE: "Salinger's Oasis of Innocence," in Studies in J. D. Salinger: Reviews, Essays, and Critiques of The Catcher in the Rye and Other Fiction, edited by Marvin Laser and Norman Fruman, The Odyssey Press, 1963, pp. 241-44.
[In the following essay, which was originally published in the New Republic in September 1961, Marple explores the theme of sexual innocence in Salinger's work.]
Salinger's first full length novel, The Catcher in the Rye, emerged after scattered fragments concerning his characters appeared during a seven year span. For some time now, it has been evident that Salinger's second novel may be developing in the same way. Salinger writes of Franny and Zooey. "Both stories are early, critical entries in a narrative series I am doing about a family of settlers in 20th Century New York, the Glasses."
"Franny" is a beautifully balanced short story. Franny,...
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Criticism
- Frederick L. Gwynn and Joseph L. Blotner (essay date 1958)
- John Updike (review date 1961)
- Anne Marple (essay date 1961)
- Joan Didion (review date 1961)
- Hilda Kirkwood (review date 1961)
- Leslie A. Fiedler (essay date 1962)
- Carl Bode (review date 1962)
- John P. McIntyre (essay date 1962)
- Frank Kermode (essay date 1962)
- Sally Daniels (review date 1962)
- George A. Panichas (essay date 1962)
- Mary McCarthy (essay date 1962)
- Robert Detweiler (essay date 1963)
- Warren French (essay date 1963)
- Daniel Seitzman (essay date 1965)
- James Lundquist (essay date 1979)
- Eberhard Alsen (essay date 1983)
- John Wenke (essay date 1991)
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