—Ron Rosenbaum, speaking of J. D. Salinger in Esquire magazine, June 1997
Friday, January 29, 2010
Remembering J. D. Salinger, or more accurately, his work.
The silence of a writer is not the same as the silence of God, but there's something analogous: an awe-inspiring creator, someone we believe has some answers of some kind, refusing to respond to us, hiding his face, withholding his creation. The problem, the rare phenomenon of the unavailable, invisible, indifferent writer (indifferent to our questions, indifferent to the publicity-industrial complex so many serve), is the literary equivalent of the problem of theodicy, the specialized subdiscipline of theology that addresses the problem of the apparent silent indifference of God to the hell of human suffering.
—Ron Rosenbaum, speaking of J. D. Salinger in Esquire magazine, June 1997
—Ron Rosenbaum, speaking of J. D. Salinger in Esquire magazine, June 1997
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