Sunday, August 4, 2019
Nine Stories :: essays papers
Nine Stories    J D Salinger wrote Nine Stories with the same brilliance as Catcher In  The Rye. His style is so unique and complex that all of his short  stories are truly enjoyable. Two of those stories are ^A perfect day  for a bananafish^ and ^For Esme with love and squalor.^ The main  characters in both of these stories, Seymour and Sargent X, have served  in World War II, and the fighting has taken its toll on them. Their  physiological well being was sacrificed and as a result they are no  longer the same people they were before. Both feel alienated from the  people in their life, the same people they had loved before the war.    The isolation the war has caused is carried over into their lives, and  it caused these men to search for new forms of comfort and security, in  the respective forms of Sybil and Esme.    In ^A perfect day for a bananafish,^ Muriel and her husband  Seymour have different perspectives of life. Muriel is a  carefree and complacent person, while her husband is quite  strange and slightly paranoid. His paranoia is illustrated when  he looses it in the hotel elevator, ^I have two normal feet and  I can^t see the slightest God-damned reason anyone should stare  at them.^ Muriel, however, is unacquainted with Seymour^s wild  breakdowns. She is rather confident that Seymour is perfectly  sane as she reports to her mother on the telephone. Muriel  doesn^t know about this side of Seymour because he has become  alienated from her after the war. Their personalities don^t  match anymore, if they ever did, and he is seeking some sort of  understanding that he knows Muriel can not provide. Seymour^s  relationship with Sybil is making up for Muriel^s shortcomings.    Seymour is looking for the understanding of a child and the  love of an adult. He wants someone who will not judge him.  He  rea!  lizes the impossibility of his desires with Sybil when he  gets a loud reaction from her after kissing the arch of her foot.    Seymour has no one who understands him, which causes his feeling of  isolation. He can no longer relate to the world he lives in and with no  one to provide comfort and security he is driven to suicide.    Sargent X has an interesting relationship with Esme in ^For  Esme with love and squalor.^ Esme is quite aware of the horrors  of war and says to Sgt. X, ^I hope you return from the war with  all your faculties intact.^ Sgt. X in fact would not have  returned with all of his faculties intact if it were not for    					    
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