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  1. Three Early Stories is a posthumous publication of American author J. D. Salinger, published in 2014, comprising three stories: "The Young Folks", "Go See Eddie" and "Once a Week Won't Kill You". These stories, as the title says, are three of his earliest stories he ever published, dating back as early as 1940.

  2. A young and ambitious writer named Jerome David Salinger set his goals very high very early in his career. He almost desperately wished to publish his early stories in The New Yorker magazine, the pinnacle, he felt, of America’s literary world.

    • (3K)
    • Kindle Edition
  3. Nov 19, 2014 · Three formative short stories by one of the most significant American writers of the twentieth century. A cocktail party conversation is most revealing in what is left unsaid. Tensions between a...

  4. www.amazon.com › Three-Early-Stories-Illustrated-Salinger › dpThree Early Stories - amazon.com

    Jun 1, 2014 · Ostensibly about a newly minted soldier trying to tell an aging aunt he is going off to war, some may see the story as a metaphor for preparing one's family for the possibility of wartime death. Three Early Stories (Illustrated) is the first legitimately published book by J.D. Salinger in more than 50 years.

    • (165)
    • J. D. Salinger
    • $16.95
    • The Devault-Graves Agency
  5. Oct 7, 2015 · This new Scholastic Edition of Three Early Stories, prepared by accomplished writer and English professor Michael Compton, includes a full study guide intended for use in high school and college classrooms.

    • (40)
    • DeVault-Graves Agency
    • $16.95
    • J D Salinger
  6. Ostensibly about a newly minted soldier trying to tell an aging aunt he is going off to war, some may see the story as a metaphor for preparing one's family for the possibility of wartime death....

  7. Nov 19, 2014 · Three formative short stories by one of the most significant American writers of the twentieth century. A cocktail party conversation is most revealing in what is left unsaid. Tensions between a brother and sister escalate to violent threats.

    • J. D. Salinger