I was gobsmacked by an historical novel written about a famous author’s experiences in World War II.
“Sergeant Salinger” by Jerome Charyn is about J.D. Salinger,
the most reclusive of American authors. His war experiences and the PTSD that
followed helps explain why he kept his distance from his fellow humans for most
of his adult life.
But that’s not the whole story. We first meet Salinger as a
young single on the make in New York City. He dates Oona O’Neil, the vampish
daughter of playwright Eugene O’Neill, and hangs out at the Stork Club with the
likes of Walter Winchell and famous people we recognize by their last names or
nicknames. Papa “Hem” Hemingway is one of them. Salinger writes radio scripts
and short stories and readers like them but they are nothing to write home
about. The letters home come later when he has something to say.
Salinger gets drafted even though he’d been previously
diagnosed with a heart murmur. It’s the spring of ’42 and Uncle Sam needs
everybody, even “half-Jewish writers with heart murmurs.” You’d think that
Salinger (he goes by the nickname Sonny) would land in a cushy stateside job writing
press releases or speeches for generals. What happens is something horrific and
unexpected, even for someone like me who knows Salinger’s stories of PTSD
veterans (“For Esme with Love and Squalor” and “A Perfect Day for Bananafish”).
Salinger told these stories from the inside out. The author’s “Nine Stories”
broke my heart when I first read them all in my 20s. Another heartbreaking story
about returning vets is “Hemingway’s “A Soldier’s Story.” In “Sergeant
Salinger,” there’s a scene when a jaded Hem visits Salinger in a Nuremberg
psych ward and calls his own story “amateurish.” Hem groused that everything was
behind him. He published “The Old Man and the Sea” in 1952 and it won the
Pulitzer Prize in 1953 and Nobel Prize in 1954.
Lest you think Charyn has employed his magnificent
storytelling skills to make it all up, think again. I did too. Until Part One:
Slapton Sands, the section that follows Prelude: Oona. Salinger is a Counter
Intelligence Corps (CIC) NCO, who accompanies invading troops to interview
prisoners and others who might spill the beans on Nazi war plans. He speaks
German. He’s been drilled in all the tricks of the interrogator’s trade. While
preparing for the D-Day landings, he’s witness to one of the army’s biggest
tragedies. In a practice run for Normandy on Lyme Bay on the Channel side of
England, a live-fire exercise goes astray and German’s Kriegsmarine speedboats
sneak in an torpedo LSTs, spilling overloaded troops into the ocean. There are
749 casualties, some interred in mass graves, and Charyn documents it.
I told myself this couldn’t possibly happen. I looked it up.
It happened. That’s when I knew we were off on a wild ride. We go to Utah Beach
on June 6, 1944. Salinger is in the thick of it with the Fourth Division. They get
into hedgerow battles with dug-in German troops and 82nd Airborne “sky
soldiers” (paratroopers) who are keen to even the score with Nazis who shot
their comrades out of the sky when they dropped into the wrong spot. I looked
that up too and it was much more gruesome than featured in “The Longest Day,”
book or movie. Anywhere, for that matter.
Kudos to Charyn for doing his homework. He is a brilliant
writer, one I’ve liked since getting hooked on his Inspector Isaac Sidel
novels. We are in the shit with Salinger all the way through occupation duty in
Germany. And he comes home which we all know. Salinger humped his “Catcher in
the Rye” manuscript through Europe and wrote until he couldn’t write any more. The
novel ends with the manuscript in his tiny retreat on Sleepy Hollow Lane, a
street that Salinger invents because of its locale near the setting of the
famous Washington Irving story. Nobody but family can find him there. Until he finishes his war-battered manuscript and it becomes a best seller. "Catcher in the Rye" still makes waves.
Publisher is Bellevue Literary Press of New York, a small press with origins at Bellevue Hospital, noted for its Psychiatric Unit (the Ghostbusters were interned there, briefly) and the medical offices where Dr. Lewis Thomas wrote the best-selling “Lives of a Cell.” I haven’t read most of its authors who write, Bellevue notes, “at the intersection of the arts and sciences.” They’ve also published other books by Charyn, including his latest “Ravage & Son,” a “vintage noir” set in Manhattan’s Lower East Side during the turn of the last century. I have pre-ordered it. Charyn has other historicals. Look them up at his web site at jeromecharyn.com