Latest stories in
"Psychological"

  • The Great Escape

    A teenager runs away to come by bizarre events that change his perception of the vicissitudes of life

    S B

    Soupt...
    Oct 3, 2018 10 min read
    0
    0
  • Just Before the War with the Eskimos

    A tale of adolescent alienation and redemption in a post-World War II setting. It focuses primarily on fifteen-year-old Ginnie Mannox's meeting with her classmate Selena Graff's older brother, Franklin.

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 18 min read
    0
    0
  • The Laughing Man

    An unnamed narrator recounts his experiences as a nine-year-old member of the Comanche Club in New York City in 1928. The leader of the club, “The Chief”, is a young law student at New York University who is described as lacking in physical attractiveness but appears beautiful to the narrator. He is widely respected by his troop for his athletic strength and storytelling ability.

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 20 min read
    0
    0
  • Down at the Dinghy

    Told in two distinct segments, the first involves a discussion between two house servants about their employer’s little boy, who has a history of running away. The second segment explores the mother's efforts to reassure her son and help him cope with his fears. The story opens with the two house servants, Mrs. Snell and Sandra, discussing the homeowner's young son, Lionel. Sandra is very worried that Lionel will tell Boo Boo (Mrs. Tannenbaum), her employer, that Sandra has made some anti-Semitic remarks about Lionel’s Jewish father (“gonna have a nose just like his father” [8]). Boo Boo finds Lionel in a dinghy preparing to cast off, and refuses to allow his mother to join him. Boo Boo pretends to be admiral of the imaginary ship in order to win Lionel over and discover why he is trying to run away. He resists, even going so far as to throw his uncle Seymour's old goggles into the lake. Lionel tells Boo Boo that Sandra called his father a "big sloppy kike".[9] While he doesn't know what this ethnic slur means, conflating the epithet “kike” with “kite”, he nevertheless grasps its derogatory connotation. Boo Boo, in an effort to reassure the boy and help him cope with the episode, succeeds in providing him insights into her own needs and the love she feels for him. At the end of the story, they race across the beach toward home, and Lionel wins.

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 14 min read
    0
    0
  • Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes

    Lee and a woman are in his apartment together. The phone rings and he reaches across her to answer it. It is Arthur, worried about his wife, Joanie, who disappeared from a party. Lee tells him to relax and assures him that she will turn up soon. Arthur is worried about his job too. He is a lawyer and has just lost a case. After he rings off Lee turns to the woman and she tells him he was wonderful and that she feels like a dog (she is apparently the missing wife). The phone rings again. It is Arthur to say that his wife has returned. Lee is speechless with amazement and ends this conversation very quickly.

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 18 min read
    0
    0
  • The Water That Falls on You from Nowhere

    In the near future water falls from the sky whenever someone lies (either a mist or a torrential flood depending on the intensity of the lie). This makes life difficult for Matt as he maneuvers the marriage question with his lover and how best to "come out" to his traditional Chinese parents.

    J C

    John ...
    Sep 28, 2018 26 min read
    0
    0
  • A Perfect Day for Bananafish

    An enigmatic examination of a young married couple, Muriel and Seymour Glass, while on vacation in Florida.

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 16 min read
    0
    0
  • Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut

    The main character, Eloise, struggles to come to terms with the life she has created for herself with her husband Lew. Her true love is Walt, a member of the Glass family, for whom she pines in the wake of his death during his service in the army. The story's title refers to an event recalled by Eloise in which she and Walt were running to catch a bus, and she sprained her ankle. Walt then said, referring to her ankle in good humor, "Poor Uncle Wiggily..

    J. D. Salinger J. D.... Sep 28, 2018 20 min read
    0
    0