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  <title>Joyce Maynard on J.D. Salinger, Survival, and Writing Through ADHD</title>
  <description> Joyce Maynard has been writing for 53 years. At 18, she landed on the cover of the New York Times Magazine, caught the eye of J.D. Salinger, and disappeared into a relationship that would define her for decades—until she finally told her story and was called a &amp;quot;predator&amp;quot; by Maureen Dowd.&amp;amp;nbsp;In this conversation, Joyce talks about being canceled before canceling was a thing, surviving as a Me Too survivor before Me Too became a movement, and why she returned to Yale at 65 only to discover she reads in the 17th percentile.&amp;amp;nbsp;  TIMELINE:  00:35 Being canceled before it was a thing  01:47 The New York Times Magazine cover story at 18  03:29 JD Salinger's letter and the beginning of their relationship  04:30 Moving in with Salinger and giving up Yale  05:39 Keeping the secret for 25 years  06:22 Writing &amp;quot;At Home in the World&amp;quot; and the backlash  08:26 When 18-year-olds dating 53-year-olds was &amp;quot;romantic&amp;quot;  09:41 The Charlie Rose interview (and what happened after)  10:27 Why the culture turned against her in 1998  11:23 Can you separate the artist from the art?  13:25 Teaching memoir to women in Guatemala  15:45 Writing family sagas and &amp;quot;How the Light Gets In&amp;quot;  16:31 Growing up in a problematic family  17:00 Mother's writing bootcamp from age 3  22:23 Including real-world events (Trump, January 6th) in fiction  24:09 Writing is not therapy or catharsis  29:43 Throwing away manuscripts that aren't good enough  30:08 Discovering ADHD at Yale at age 65  32:08 The D-minus French exam that changed everything  34:22 Reading in the 17th percentile  36:39 The gift of ADHD  40:39 &amp;quot;You cannot be a writer if you're not a reader&amp;quot; - and why that's wrong  41:48 Character-first vs. plot-first writing  43:33 Never knowing where the story will end (vs. John Irving)  44:18 No outlines - &amp;quot;outline is for a term paper&amp;quot;  46:22 Finding inspiration in news headlines  47:49 Why some stories are memoir and others are fiction  50:48 On sensitivity readers and the transgender character  51:44 When characters display &amp;quot;politically incorrect&amp;quot; attitudes  52:57 Fear of cancellation from the left  53:29 Trigger warnings at Yale and the softening of everything </description>
  <author_name>Write About Now</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.writeaboutnowmedia.com</author_url>
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