"Slight Rebellion off Madison" was completed during a two-week sojourn at
Beekman Tower hotel during August 1941. Originally titled "The Lovely Dead Girl at Table Number Six", Salinger had been working on the story for the past year. The story is notable for being the first work to present Salinger's iconic character
Holden Morrisey Caulfield, the future protagonist of his 1951 novel
The Catcher in the Rye. The public, however, first saw mentions of Holden as Vincent Caufield's missing-in-action brother in "
This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise", which was published in the October 1945 issue of
Esquire magazine; and two months later, readers were given more insight into Holden's character in "
I'm Crazy", published in the December 1945 issue of ''
Collier's'' magazine. The first of Salinger's many stories to be published by
The New Yorker, the piece was withheld from the journal's December 1941 issue. Due to the gravity of Japan's
attack at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and the immediate entry of the United States into World War II, Salinger's story of "dissatisfied upper-class youths" was deemed contrary to the country's wartime mood. In the summer of 1943,
The New Yorker indicated that "Slight Rebellion" would appear in its Christmas edition, but insisted that the story be shortened due to space considerations, to which Salinger consented. Despite the alteration, the story was ultimately cut from the issue. This experience contributed to Salinger's sense of betrayal, and served to deepen his "suspicion of editorial methods and motives for the rest of his career." "Slight Rebellion off Madison" would not appear in the journal until after the end of the war, on December 21, 1946. ==Critical Assessment==