LoveLife | June 11, 2009 | 11 comments

J.D. Salinger Sues Over Catcher Sequel

Image
Apocalipstick
The anonymous author of the purported sequel to "The Catcher in the Rye," which has triggered a lawsuit by J.D. Salinger, is a Swedish man whose previous published works include "The Macho Man's (Bad) Joke Book," "The Erotic A-Z," and a volume listing the 100 best heavy metal albums.

Fredrik Colting, 32, acknowledged in an interview this week that he wrote the book "60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye," which Salinger has branded a "rip-off pure and simple" and triggered the reclusive 90-year-old author to file a federal copyright lawsuit. In a June 5 U.S. District Court order signed by Judge Deborah Batts, Colting is identified as "Fredrik Colting writing under the pseudonym John David California," or J.D. California. A copy of the Batts order can be found below. Colting told TSG that, along with a partner, he has produced a variety of humor or "quirk" titles, but that "60 Years Later" was his "first published novel." Colting, pictured at right, denied that the book was a "Catcher" sequel and said he was surprised that Salinger filed a copyright claim: "I'm Swedish, we don't sue people here." Pending a June 17 court hearing, Colting, who runs Nicotext, a small Sweden-based publishing company, has agreed not to distribute "60 Years Later" in the United States.

Additionally, since the book recently went on sale in England, Colting agreed to ask Amazon.com and another online retailer to not ship the book to U.S. customers. A purported photo of "California" appeared last month in England's Daily Telegraph, but the picture was actually of actor Gustav Roth, a friend of Colting. "It was a bit tricky of us but we did it without any bad intentions," Colting wrote in an e-mail. "I mean, the whole point of a pseudonym is it being a secret."
  1. groups:
    Art and Style,   Art,   LoveLife,   books
  2. tags:
    Art and Style Art LoveLife Books 9 more
  3.     
    |

11 comments // J.D. Salinger Sues Over Catcher Sequel

  • Cheeeba
  • Apocalipstick
    • 0
      Apocalipstick  
    • Cheeeba:

      I have read the book. I actually lifted that review from Twitter classic book summary in 140 characters or less. I thought it was funny. Instead it jus' got me called a darn idiot. ;)

    • 2 years ago
  • DeliaTheArtist
    • 0
      DeliaTheArtist  
    • Image
    • "I'm Swedish, we don't sue people here."

      O rly? Well Salinger is American- we sue people here. A LOT.

      Why the hell would you make a sequel (or anything like that) to Catcher anyway? It's perfect the way it is. It's one of those things that should be left alone, not bastardized for any reason.

      So far the solution is to just ban it in America? (Ironic since Catcher was also a banned book!) That doesn't make a lick of sense to me.

    • 2 years ago
  • copperdog
    • 0
      copperdog  
    • I have no respect for this guy; not only does he have audacity to create a sell-out sequel to a classic novel that had reached iconic status, but he chose to do so without consent. This is infuriating and I hope this D grade author gets his 'comuppance'.

    • 2 years ago
  • canofmeatfilm
    • 0
      canofmeatfilm  
    • The bizzare secret world of the pseudonym. Like Pynchon, Salinger has succesfully disappeared all of his public life. In America where we love celebrity, Salinger is a blessed anamolie. Thanks apocalipstick for this interesting story.

    • 2 years ago
  • slarabee
  • Apocalipstick
  • Found_Avenue
  • DeliaTheArtist
more from LoveLife:

top videos