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J.D. Salinger Estate Settles w/ Catcher Sequel Author

10:57 am in American literature, J.D. Salinger, Literary News, New release by jennifer-ciotta

60 Years Later Settlement, J.D. Salinger Estate Settles with ColtingBefore legendary author J.D. Salinger’s death in January 2010, he finally came out of reclusive hiding … or at least through his army of lawyers … to fight The Catcher in the Rye‘s unauthorized sequel 60 Years Later written by Fredrik Colting (pen name: J.D.).  However, it wasn’t until nearly one year after his death on December 7, 2010 that Salinger’s estate settled with Colting.

According to the agreement, the permanent injunction reads Colting is barred “from manufacturing, publishing, distributing, shipping, advertising, promoting, selling, or otherwise disseminating any copy of the book 60 Years Later, by Fredrik Colting writing under the name of J.D. California, or any portion thereof, in or to the United States.”

However, Colting is allowed to freely sell the book in international territories.  Literary source Publishers Weekly reports Colting is selling his novel in at least six countries.

So the question is: would you buy 60 Years Later or not?  Are you curious to see Colting’s version of an elderly Holden Caulfield … or do you think the book is just a rip-off and should not be read out of respect to Salinger?

Let us know your thoughts …

Jennifer

P.S. For those of you snowed in, it’s a great day to read Holden Caulfield in Winter Manhattan.

Saying Goodbye to J.D. Salinger

4:52 pm in Uncategorized by jennifer-ciotta

Catcher in the Rye

It is with a heavy heart that LT found out today that famed Catcher in the Rye author J.D. Salinger died at the age of 91 of natural causes in his New Hampshire home.

Catcher in the Rye is the novel that defined adolescent angst for so many high school students in the US.  Published in 1951, the book became a literary staple in classrooms as well as in the hearts of American readers.

Salinger lived a reclusive life in the town of Cornish, New Hampshire, refusing interview requests and publicity.  He also gave up publishing his writing, since he hadn’t published a story since 1965.

Salinger, however, came out of hiding in 2009 through attorneys to sue an author who wrote a continuation novel about Holden Caulfield’s life sixty years after the original book took place.  Salinger and his onslaught of attorneys sued the writer in defense of copyright and won.  Publication of the sequel has been banned in the US.

As we say goodbye to one of the most brilliant novelists of all time, take a look our Holden Caulfield-inspired LT article published in 2007 entitled: Holden Caulfield in Winter Manhattan.

Rest in peace J.D. Salinger . . .

Jennifer, Network Editorial Director