Reclusive US author J.D. Salinger dies at 91

BOSTON, (Reuters) – Reclusive U.S. author J.D.  Salinger, who wrote the American literary classic “The Catcher  in the Rye,” has died in New Hampshire aged 91, his agent said  yesterday.  

“He died yesterday at his home in New Hampshire,” said  literary agent Phyllis Westberg.  

“The Catcher in the Rye” was published in 1951, and its  story of alienation and rebellion, featuring the teenage hero  Holden Caulfield, immediately resonated with adolescent and  young adult readers.  

The work has been translated into the world’s major  languages and sold more than 65 million copies.  

Salinger has been a recluse since 1953, though, ferociously  protecting his privacy in Cornish, a small town in northwest  New Hampshire.  

Besides “Catcher” he published only a few books and  collections of short stories in his literary career, including  “9 Stories,” “Franny and Zooey,” “Raise High the Roofbeam  Carpenters” and “Seymour: – An Introduction.”  

His last published work was in 1965.  

Neighbours in Cornish rarely saw him and he never returned  phone calls or letters from readers or admirers. Only rumours,  infrequent sightings, lawsuits and rare, brief interviews  brought him to public attention. 

As such, Salinger would have been a disappointment to his  most famous creation.

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