Rereading Old Favourites: an Interlude with Paper Dolls

Literary paper dolls. Has anyone had a better idea, ever? I’m a little bit late to this party, but starting in May 2019, The Paris Review writer Julia Berick partnered with illustrator Jenny Kroik to create “what us bookworm-clotheshorse child-adults have always wanted: literary paper dolls.”

The first one in the series was my very own 1940s gal-in-an-existential-crisis, Franny Glass. I can’t even tell you how happy this discovery has made me. J. D. Salinger’s Franny and Zooey has long been my all-time favourite book. The year I first read it (I was 17 or 18), I bought a stack of copies and gave them to everyone I knew, whether they wanted them or not (mostly they did not).

The Franny Glass paper doll complete with various items of clothing and Bloomberg the cat.

Now, having said that, I have to admit that I have not re-read the book in years. Actually, I have been a little afraid to. I didn’t want to find that it didn’t hold up. And, Harriett Gilbert—one of my favourite readers—is of the opinion that when re-reading Franny and Zooey as an adult, one finds that it is on the pretentious and self-indulgent side.

I have been known to disagree with Harriett, but only rarely. So I have put off revisiting this old fave, because the fear lingered. Having to critically reassess a cherished book that has lived in your heart for many years is a deeply unpleasant thing to have to do.

However, heartened and emboldened by my new paper doll, and by Julia Berick’s introduction that insists that Franny and Zooey holds up very well indeed, thank you very much, I have embarked at long last on a re-read. And I still love it. Phew. As you might expect, it resonates differently with me these days, but resonate it does. As Virginia Woolf wrote about enduring books, “At each fresh reading one notices some change in them, as if the sap of life ran in their leaves....” I am happy to report that Franny and Zooey is, for me, one such enduring book. And I am still in love with the Glass family.

If you are reading this, Julia Berick and Jenny Kroik, I would like to humbly request a Zooey paper doll. One feels somewhat incomplete without both of these characters.

However, I would also like to express my admiration for the other literary characters who have been selected to be immortalized in paper doll form, including Clarissa Dalloway, Sula Peace, Cassandra Edwards, and Rebecca de Winter. All very worthy ladies. But none capture my heart the way that Franny Glass does, and so it is she that now adorns my wall in her paper doll form.

There were half circles under her eyes, and other, subtler signs that mark an acutely troubled young girl, but nonetheless no one could have missed seeing that she was a first-class beauty. Her skin was lovely, and her features were delicate and most distinctive. Her eyes were very nearly the same quite astonishing shade of blue as Zooey’s, but were set farther apart, as a sister’s eyes no doubt should be—and they were not, so to speak, a day’s work to look into, as Zooey’s were. Some four years earlier, at her graduation from boarding school, her brother Buddy had morbidly prophesied to himself, as she grinned at him from the graduates’ platform, that she would in all probability one day marry a man with a hacking cough. So there was that in her face, too.”

Franny and Zooey


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