Perfect Day Essays

  • A Perfect Day for Bananafish

    718 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Perfect Day for Bananafish Picture walking into a hotel room  and finding a  man dead on a bed.  Upon  closer inspection it becomes obvious that he has supposedly taken his own life with the gun that lay beside him.  In  talking to his wife who was asleep on the bed next to him when this incident occurred, it is learned that he just walked in the door and shot  himself late the previous night.  Out of the many questions that could be asked from this story, I believe that it is probably extremely

  • Perfect Day For Bananafish

    1150 Words  | 3 Pages

    An Evaluation of The Trauma on the Psyche from War from Seymour’s Perspective and An Analyzation of The Themes. ‘’A Perfect Day For Bananafish’’ by J. D. Salinger. A war scarred veteran comes back to his country after having served in either the European, African, or south pacific theatre in World War II in what must have been hell. He comes back, to what he perceives, a vapid and shallow society focused on fashion, T.V. gossip, and being socialites. He only seems to be able to connect with children

  • The Almost Perfect Day

    942 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Almost Perfect Day Some of the best times I have in the summertime are riding my jetski. One of my best friends, who also has a ski, go out almost everyday in the summer. We would sometimes even wake up around six o'clock in the morning just to ride the glossy surf at Sandy Hook. There was one great day I had on the ski… It was around seven in the morning when I heard my phone ring. It was my buddy Jared waking me up to tell me to meet him at the Channel Club Marina to go out on our jetskis

  • Symbolism In A Perfect Day For Bananafish

    872 Words  | 2 Pages

    The world is in a large era of capitalistic wealth and materialistic gain. Every day it is shoved into the faces of the masses to consume what is being made, what is being sold, and what is trending. In a society where vanity and materialism go hand in hand, it is easy to forget other people in your life; thus, leading to neglecting those around you. In the story “A Perfect Day For Bananafish,” J. D. Salinger employs the devices of symbolism using the Bananafish suggesting mental illness and consumerism

  • Analysis: A Perfect Day For Bananafish

    1024 Words  | 3 Pages

    warm families. There are sights caused by the evils of humanity that one cannot forget in the acts of war and terrorism. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is common among war veterans, leaving them detached from society. Seymour Glass in A Perfect Day for Bananafish shows signs of PTSD and depression through his poor relationship with Muriel and her family, his inclination

  • A Perfect Day in the Ocean

    955 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Perfect Day in the Ocean As I watch, the waves from the shore look fun and almost innocent as they crest and then crash over one another. I can taste the salt in they air and watch little rainbows glisten through the prisms of the ocean’s spray. The warm ocean water toward the shore is covered with foam and bubbles from the rumbling waves as children and their families play in the gritty tan colored sand. I think to myself, “This is perfect”. I make the final preparations on my Yamaha Waverunner

  • A Perfect Day For Bananafish Comparison Essay

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    After reading "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" and "For Esme--with Love and Squalor", I found the two short stories to be similar, with only a few small differences. For example, the themes are very much alike due to the war and how it affects the people in each character's lives which shows to be the main conflict in both of the following stories. In Bananafish, Seymour the main character, is suffering from PTSD after being involved in the war, which similar to Sergeant X, who is the narrator in For

  • A Perfect Day For Bananafish by J.D. Salinger

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    bananafish" (Salinger 7). A bananafish is a fictional creature created in the mind of Seymour Glass, a character in J.D Salinger's "A Perfect Day For Bananafish." They are much like any other fish but they swim into holes where bananas grow, and eat so many bananas that they cannot escape. "A Perfect Day For Bananafish" was published in 1948 in the New York Magazine ("A Perfect Day For Bananafish"). The story is set on the sunny beaches of Florida, soon after WWII in 1948, expressed when Muriel, another character

  • A Perfect Day For Bananafish Character Analysis

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the short story “A Perfect Day for Bananafish”, by J.D. Salinger, the main character is Seymour Glass, a man that has a disease from the war that affects his mental health. Another important character is Muriel Glass, Seymour’s wife. She is materialistic, and seems not to care that much for Seymour's illness. The story opens with Muriel talking to her mom on the phone, while Seymour is outside on the beach. Seymour says hi to a little child, Sybil. He talks with Sybil for a while about an animal

  • J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Ortgies

    1870 Words  | 4 Pages

    J.D. Salinger's A Perfect Day for Bananafish At first glance, J.D. Salinger's short story 'A Perfect Day for Bananafish' is the story of a psychically-torn war veteran whose post-traumatic stress moves him to take his own life while on a second honeymoon with his wife. Indeed, that is the story, but that first glance does not reveal the inner motives and symbolic pathways Seymour Glass takes to reach the final decision to end his life. The carefully placed details and minute innuendoes are deliberate

  • What Is The Loss Of Innocence In A Perfect Day For Bananafish

    542 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short story, “A Perfect Day for BananaFish” from the collection, Nine Stories, by JD Salinger, Salinger makes the claim that Seymour Glass, a World War II Veteran, is deeply disturbed from his war experiences. Salinger shows the extent of Glass’s disturbance through his interactions with other people, and his view of the world around him. Seymour Glass has lost his innocence in the war. He suffered through tragedy and death and has lost his purity. And this loss of innocence has led him

  • Characters in A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J.D. Salinger

    1127 Words  | 3 Pages

    Characters in A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J.D. Salinger The characters in Salinger?s ?A Perfect Day for Bananafish? seem to exist in opposite worlds. On one hand, Salinger creates Muriel to represent materialism and superficiality and on the other hand, he creates Sybil to provide justification of the child-like innocence rarely found in society. Salinger?s main character, Seymour, is aware of the superficiality expressed in Muriel?s world and chooses not to be apart of it. Seymour wants

  • Searching for Innocence: A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J.D. Salinger

    1112 Words  | 3 Pages

    innocence in his short story, "A Perfect Day for Bananafish." Distinct similarities appear between the main character, Seymour Glass, and Salinger including the World War II experience and attraction for younger, more innocent people (Salerno). Salinger conveys this through Seymour’s preference of a young girl’s company over his own wife's company. Throughout the story, “Salinger constantly draws attention to himself and his precocious intellect” (Daniel Moran). “A Perfect Day for Bananafish” revolves around

  • A Perfect Day For Bananafish By J.D. Salinger

    584 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Perfect Day For Bananafish By J.D. Salinger A Perfect Day For Bananafish was written in 1948 by the American writer Jerome David Salinger. This was just three years after the ending of World War II, where Salinger was stationed in Berlin, Germany. From further analysis of the short-story I have come to the conclusion that Seymour is Salinger’s role model. Seymour has just returned from World War II, as well as Salinger had when he wrote the story. Seymour returns to his native country very confused

  • Control in Ira Levin´s This Perfect Day

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    wrong. In 1970, Ira Levin published This Perfect Day, which shows us how it would be if all our differences were taken away and we were made the same. Men don’t grow facial hair, and women don’t have breasts because they are given treatments that dull their minds and make them all think the way they want them to think. She shows us how the world would be if it were controlled by people who want a perfect society in which they control everything. In This Perfect Day, we see how the world would be if it

  • A Comparison of This Perfect Day, Brave New World, and 1984

    1861 Words  | 4 Pages

    This Perfect Day, Brave New World, 1984:  Dystopian Masterpiece This Perfect Day belongs to the genre of "dystopian" or anti-utopian novels, like Huxley's Brave New World and Orwell's 1984. Yet it is more satisfying than either.  This Perfect Day is probably Ira Levin's greatest work of his career. Levin's work, despite being written in 1970, is very plausible having realistic technology, such as scanners and computers which watch over the entire family, the entire population of the world. This

  • Comparing the Hero in Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut and A Perfect Day for Bananafish

    675 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Misfit Hero in Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut and A Perfect Day for Bananafish The "Misfit Hero" is a common trait of J.D. Salinger's short stories. The "Misfit Hero" is a character who is in conflict with him or herself and has good qualities and bad qualities. This hero is usually isolated and is attempting to break out of his darkness because he craves and requires love and warmth. These protagonists are unable to function effectively in society because they are so overcome with experience

  • Suicide in A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J. D. Salinger

    2071 Words  | 5 Pages

    A Perfect Day for Bananafish follows the events leading up to the eventual suicide of Seymour Glass. In the story, Seymour is described as a lost spirit who sees himself as being fundamentally different from his social environment following his wartime experience; he leaves the war “seeing-more” and as a result, awakens to find that he has lost touch with the material world. Salinger uses the story’s dialog as the medium for conveying Seymour’s struggle; he establishes the shallow nature of the environment

  • J.D. Salinger's story A Perfect Day for Bananafish

    1470 Words  | 3 Pages

    He seems to suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome because of the war. He recently has tried to commit suicide twice. Once by driving his father-in-law's car into a tree and again by trying to jump out a window. J.D. Salinger's story, "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," seems to be a simple story about a couple on vacation in Florida and his encounter with a child named Sybil on the beach. Seymour's relationship with Sybil after further examination allows one to see that what really is taking place

  • Buildup of Emotions and Lack of Communication: A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J.D. Sallinger

    1318 Words  | 3 Pages

    one’s life can lead to devastation, the eruption of the mind’s volcano. American twentieth century author, J.D. Salinger, illustrates the devastating consequences caused by a buildup of emotions and a lack of communication in his short story, “A Perfect Day for Bananafish.” Salinger “has become, in biographer Ian Hamilton's phrase, ‘famous for not wanting to be famous’ ” (Stevick). In this short story, Salinger details the interactions of the main character, Seymour Glass, with Sybil Carpenter, a young