Joyce Maynard

From Free net encyclopedia

Image:Joyce maynard looking back cover.jpg Daphne Joyce Maynard (November 5, 1953 - ) is an American writer who became famous for her relationship with J. D. Salinger.

Maynard was a student in the first coeducational class at Phillips Exeter Academy, and wrote regularly for Seventeen magazine. She entered Yale University in 1971 and sent a collection of her writings to the editors of the New York Times Magazine. They asked her to write an article for them, which was published as An Eighteen Year Old Looks Back On Life on April 23, 1972. The article garnered a great deal of attention, including a letter from J. D. Salinger, then 53 years old, who complimented her writing and warned her of the dangers of publicity. They continued to correspond, and after finishing her freshman year, Maynard visited Salinger in New Hampshire. She dropped out of Yale and lived with Salinger for ten months. She published her first book, Looking Back, at the age of nineteen.

For many years, Maynard chose not to discuss her affair with Salinger in any of her writings, but she broke her silence in a memoir called At Home In The World. In 1999 she outraged many of Salinger's fans by selling his letters to her, saying that she was forced to do so for financial reasons; she would have preferred to donate them to Beinecke Library. Software developer Peter Norton bought the letters for $156,000 and announced his intention to return them to Salinger.

Maynard gained widespread commercial acceptance with the publication of her novel To Die For, about the Pamela Smart murder which was later produced as a film starring Nicole Kidman.

Contents

Novels

Fiction

  • Baby Love (1981)
  • To Die For (1992)
  • Where Love Goes (1995)
  • The Usual Rules (2003)
  • The Cloud Chamber (2005)

Nonfiction

  • Looking Back (1973)
  • Domestic Affairs (1987)
  • At Home In The World (1998)

External links