'A Perfect Day For Bananafish', a short story by J.D. Salinger. Read by Miranda Raison.
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- čas přidán 7. 03. 2021
- An intimate read, in the style of the time of this explosive short story from 'For Esmé - with Love & Squalor', a collection of short stories by J.D. Salinger.
Read by English stage and screen actress Miranda Raison. - Zábava
You read this beautifully! Thank you so much for giving each character their own tone and feel! Every success to you!
I read this in high school and every time I hear it again I weep.
uhhhh...you're just dramatic 🙄😐
Anyone else here because of the anime banana fish?
Its amazing how much this book seems to relate to this book I can't explain it
Yes!!!! I’m here because of banana fish!! I love that anime so much
How is this story related at all to the anime? Other than the title there's literally no similarities
@@jojohairee9987 seymour is someone who has experienced things that have forever altered him, so he can’t go back to societal normalcy (like ash). the bananafish represent a loss of innocence and the story implies that seymour has eaten too many (ash). him shooting himself in the head parallels w ash’s death because they both wormed themselves into a hole that they “can’t get out of” and accepted their fates
@@daytonaaasherriff7232 thank you for the beautiful explanation ❤
Here, I'm actually writhing the anime, it was so hard to get over the ending 😢
I had to listen to this twice, to actually get the Seymour's story.
No regrets though.
Astonishing writing. The dialogue is just beyond perfection. That little girl running off "without regret". The great tragedy is that Saiinger stopped publishing in the 60's. His son says that there is more to come. We can only hope he's telling the truth.
Correct. if you see his son's interview "Celebrating JD Salinger- An Interview with Matt Salinger", Matt says there are stories of JD all ready to go and be published sometime in the future with his confirmation.
The question becomes how it will be presented. JD was firmly against digital books. Matt did all he could to try to convince him that digital reading was okay and more people were reading because of it, but JD died unconvinced, always wanting a tangible book instead. The question becomes what to do? Ethically one wants what JD wants but... there is a level of logic that I feel I disagree with JD on this one. I think digital books have given an accessibility to books that others might not have ever found.
There will be both digital as well as physical without a doubt
I'm sorry to be negative but... JDS's son said that over 10 years ago. I would LOVE to see new writing being published, but I don't see it happening. I see the promise of new stuff being published as JDS's last great prank on the world.
@@williamdonnelly224 It seems strange that his son should lie about this.
Thank you for reading this us - excellent job!
Good job, thank you. Nine Stories, for me, is Salinger supreme, have read often for nearly seven decades. Simply great.
It really is some kind of laconic masterpiece, isn’t it. I reread it for the third or fourth time recently, and I realized the war is almost never mentioned but always ever-present in the background of one or more of the characters-obviously negatively the mental state of the characters. It’s almost a book about ptsd, while never addressing this directly.
A brilliant performance.
I absolutely love Mr.Salinger and his work
Am I the the only who thinks Seymour interaction with Sybil was inappropriate on the beach ?? Truly asking
Yeah the foot kiss had me like🫤
no, it is a very weird interaction. not only are we much more uptight about how adults interact with kids nowadays, but it was also a weird interaction even by late 40s standards
Much of Salinger’s themes have to do with innocence of youth and it’s corruption. I believe it was intentionally in appropriate. I am trying to understand the extent and as to “why”.
nah your trippin
Do you think it was a good idea to leave a small girl alone on a beach???
So it’s very obvious that Seymour is just Salinger. As it’s known, Salinger is a veteran of WWII himself, and has been to a hospital over his mental health, after the war.
So it’s very interesting to see what he thinks of himself by using other characters, other than Seymour, to describe himself. Muriel Glass is made to be the wife of Seymour, and clearly cares about him, even if he acts so weird. But then there’s everyone else in this book, who thinks of Seymour as a man ready to lose his mind at any second. So I think it’s safe to say that Salinger really thinks of himself as an outcast, maniac, weirdo that only Muriel (maybe) and literal children can understand him.
Actually, scratch that, only children can understand him. That whole part about the German book just tells me that while Muriel can try to be nice to him and all, she’ll never actually try to understand it, because really it’s a huge feat to do as an adult, to just learn German or find a translation of that same book. But with children, Seymour can just throw out the idea of bananafishes and the child will just understand.
Which is really concerning when it’s only children who can just understand him, because that’s where a lot of creepy shit begins to pop up in Salinger’s character.
(P.s. the moment Seymour said “God Damn”, it instantly raised my Holden Caulfield red flag. Seymour is just Salinger)
The best reading! The only one when the young man sounds like he is fighting something inside, sounds with an effort.. as if he is trying hard to appear normal..
Great work. I will use this in my class.
Outstanding reading
Well done. Please read more Salinger. 🙏🏻
Miraculously beautiful.
thank you !!!
Thanks!
Hello dear; I enjoyed this audiobook so much. I wish you read "De Daumier-Smith's blue Period" too. It's my favorite story.
well done
Please read " For Esme.." Your voice is beautiful!
So let me ask the question that an aspiring actress from my College class, asked, when we reviewed this short story:
"Why is Seymour Glass obsessed with feet?"
Just kidding, but that is one view you can have of Seymour Glass based upon the events of this short story. I have a feeling that JD Salinger never thought about that. I know that view took our Professor by surprise.
Just for the sake of saying this, JD Salinger coined a great phrase, within the story: "For Esme-----With Love and Squalor":
"She was breathtakingly levelheaded."
What happened to the Tom O'Bedlam version of this?
You did a good job by the way. Just, no one reads it quite like Tom O'Bedlam.
the voice is American
Miraculously beautiful.
i wouldn't say that...