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  1. One in a series illustrating each of J.D. Salinger's "Nine Stories". Personal work.  Giclee prints are made with velvet fine art paper and archival inks to last a lifetime. All prints are an open edition. Prints have extra white space around the image for easy framing. Frame is

  2. 29 de jun. de 2012 · Parue en 1953 dans le recueil Nine Stories (De Daumier-Smith's blue period), cette nouvelle fut la seule à être rejetée par le New Yorker. Et franchement, on se demande pourquoi. Pocket 1998 (traduction de Jean-Baptiste Rossi, Robert Laffont) Résumé Jean Daumier-Smith de son faux nom d'artiste réside à New York avec son beau-père Bobby.

  3. 21 de nov. de 2015 · Taken from his Nine Stories collection the story is narrated in the first person by a young man called Jean De Daumier-Smith, or at least that is the name that the narrator calls himself by. The fact that the reader never knows Jean’s real name may be significant as it suggests the idea of not only escape (from who Jean really is) but it also serves to highlight the possible idea of ...

  4. JOHN RUSSELL. I. "De Daumier-Smith's Blue Period," the next-to-last and. longest of the Nine Stories, was loriginally published in the World Review for May, 1952. In July of the previous year Salinger had brought out The Catcher in the Rye and also "Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes," so it can roughly be said that "De Daumier-Smith" is separated ...

  5. ド・ドーミエ=スミスの青の時代. 「 ド・ドーミエ=スミスの青の時代 」(ド・ドーミエ=スミスのあおのじだい、原題: De Daumier-Smith's Blue Period )は、 J・D・サリンジャー の短編小説。. イギリス の『ワールド・レヴュー』誌 1952年 5月 号に掲載された。. 短 ...

  6. After offering her high praise, he told her that he was "an agnostic," and a fan of St. Francis de Assisi (45). He asked her if one of the figures in her painting was Mary Magdalene. In the P.S. Jean asked sister Irma to do some "outdoor sketches," to buy a bunch of art supplies, and to send him all of her other work (52).

  7. However, his lesser-known works are equally intriguing, including the short story “De Daumier-Smith’s Blue Period.” This article provides a summary and exploration of the themes and motifs present in the story, shedding light on Salinger’s unique style and literary genius.