Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Short Story Wednesday: "Uncle Wiggily in the Country" From Nine Stories by J.D. Salinger

 

Eloise and Mary Jane are two former college roommates, who are drinking the afternoon away in a suburban Connecticut town as a snowstorm builds outside. They are rehashing college days and the war that came soon after or at least men they knew that went to war. Eloise   remembers Walt, who died in an accident overseas and compares him with the man she married. Walt was the ideal man although one doubts he would have lasted with Eloise long.

Ramona, Eloise's small daughter comes into the room along with her pal, Jimmy, who turns out to be an invisible friend. The maid, Grace, a Black woman, asks if her husband can spend the night due to the inclement weather and Eloise turns her down cold. She is cruel to Ramona too and later cries at her bedside then asks Mary Jane if she was a nice girl in college. 

This story is a critique of the sort of women one found in the postwar suburbs. Eloise is given no good traits or moments in this story and Mary Jane fares only slightly better. Ramona's imaginary friend is much like Walt, the man her mother lost.

This is the only piece of work Salinger sold to Hollywood. It became a film called, MY FOOLISH HEART, which bore almost no resemblance to the story.

You do wonder when the war stopped playing such a big part in lives and in stories. I remember thinking the same thing about Vietnam. Such wars inhabit fiction as well as lives for a long time. 

(Uncle Wiggily is not the storybook character but instead the term Walt uses for Eloise's sprained ankle). 


George Kelley

Jerry House 

Tracy K 

Neer 

James Reasoner

12 comments:

Margot Kinberg said...

I have to admit, Patti, I've read Salinger, but not the short stories. Funny how that happens. Anyway, I'm glad to see them highlighted here!

Jeff Meyerson said...

Yes, and now the pandemic is just starting to appear more often in fiction.

A while ago (last year, pretty sure) I read Z.Z. Packer's story "Brownies" online, and I was very impressed with it, the tale of a black troupe of Brownies confronting a group of white Brownies on a camping trip. So when I read a mention of her collection DRINKING COFFEE ELSEWHERE, I got it from the library. I've read two or three and so far, none of them came close to "Brownies." But I'll try another.

Also reading Jonathan Woods's horror collection, PHONE CALL FROM HELL & Other Tales of the Damned, which I seem to have picked up either free or very cheap, mainly on recommendations of Stephen King and some others. So far, again, readable but I am not very impressed. There is one story about Hemingway and Graham Greene in 1959 Havana that goes nowhere. So far, I'd say skip it.

I am awaiting the new collection from Crippen & Landru (Quaker midwife series by Edith Maxwell), which I anticipate will be more to my taste than these two. I've been trying to read more of the many collections that I already own.

pattinase (abbott) said...

I remember reading "Brownies" after you talked about it. Too bad the rest aren't as good.
I read a lot of his stories years ago, Margot, but none recently.

neer said...

I read Salinger's Catcher in the Rye which left me underwhelmed. But I'd like to try his short fiction. Here's mine for the week: Wilson and Some Others by G.D.H. and Margaret Cole:

https://ahotcupofpleasureagain.wordpress.com/2023/04/12/1940-club-wilson-and-others-by-g-d-h-and-margaret-cole/

TracyK said...

I have read all of Salinger's short fiction and I liked it when I read it. I don't remember this story except for the invisible friend and the title.

I would like to get new copies and read them again.

Todd Mason said...

Another example of how I remember Salinger, not the lightest of hands in certain ways, though I've not yet read this one.

I might actually get my new SSW out before midnight. New cat (and assuaging the Old cat) and Alice's new business and related matters are taking up a fair amount of Everything, not least energy and time.

Todd Mason said...

Also, indeed, the degree to which Vietnam War seemed to slip from the daily conversations well before its end, except for those who were directly involved, through loved ones or family, or politically attentive...rather as with Iraq and Afghanistan. And Haiti and and and.

Todd Mason said...

James Reasoner has one today (and one Sunday) that would be relevant to the effort here:
https://jamesreasoner.blogspot.com/2023/04/mens-adventure-quarterly-7-gang-girls.html

https://jamesreasoner.blogspot.com/2023/04/sunday-morning-bonus-pulp-smashing.html

pattinase (abbott) said...

My grandson is reading THE THINGS THEY CARRIED in school. So the wars live on.
Thanks, Todd.

Todd Mason said...

You're quite welcome. Aside from dancing with cats, Blogspot decided to go insane on me and screw up the formatting, still not fully straightened out but I'm afraid I'll tear the computer apart and go Looking for Blogspot engineers who've Been Improving the product in recent years (at one point somehow, possibly and even probably my action but I suspect it might not be, it decided my log to this post on your blog was actually a link to an old draft of my post).

And thank you.

Todd Mason said...

https://socialistjazz.blogspot.com/2023/04/love-is-in-ether-by-laurence-dumortier.html

Todd Mason said...

I would much rather have read THE THINGS THEY CARRIED than THE CATCHER IN THE RYE...