Blue Melody J D Salinger Pdf
Nov 01, 2009 J D Salinger in Magazines. Blue Melody'. Purchasers of this hard copy book will also be sent a large pdf file incorporating hundreds of.
Joyce Maynard
Available public 2836 cove 2836 Salinger's Last Story in Cosmopolitan, 'Blue Melody' A.E. Hotchner talks about J.D. Salinger's last short story in Cosmopolitan magazine. Editor, novelist and playwright A.E. Hotchner talks about J.D. Salinger's last short story in Cosmopolitan magazine in 1948. Then Salinger's friend and a Cosmopolitan editor, Hotchner had been warned by Salinger that 'not one word can be changed' in the story.
Unbeknownst to Hotchner, others had made a single edit. Salinger's title 'Scratchy Needle on a Phonograph Record' became 'Blue Melody.' 2014-01-14 21:00 publish disabled show false 9908 Lorraine Hansberry on being young, gifted and black Lorraine Hansberry encourages young writers to represent their community in their work. 2018-01-19 21:00 cove 9750 Learn about the women who inspired Denis O'Hare growing up Growing up, Denis O'Hare was surrounded and inspired by musicians.
2017-12-01 21:00 cove. Editor, novelist and playwright A.E. Hotchner talks about J.D. Salinger’s last short story in Cosmopolitan magazine in 1948. Salinger gave the manuscript to his friend Hotchner, then an editor at Cosmopolitan, while they were playing poker at the Greenwich Village tavern Chumley’s.
An adamant Salinger warned Hotchner that “not one word can be changed.” A note attached to it said, “Either as is or not at all.” Unbeknownst to Hotchner, other editors at the magazine had made a single edit. Salinger’s title for the story, which hinges on an African-American jazz singer’s tragic death, was “Scratchy Needle on a Phonograph Record.” In its September 1948 issue, Cosmopolitan changed the title to “Blue Melody.” Hotchner chose to break the news to his friend, “Jerry,” over a beer in Chumley’s. Salinger was furious at what he saw as a betrayal of his trust.
That year, Salinger began a close relationship with the magazine he admired and preferred to be published in, The New Yorker, which gave him a “first-look” contract for his stories.