The son of celebrated US writer JD Salinger has revealed that previously unseen work by his late father will be published.
In comments to The Guardian newspaper, Matt Salinger confirmed reports that the author of The Catcher In The Rye continued to write decades after he stopped publishing books.
He said that he and Salinger's widow, Colleen, are "going as fast as we freaking can" to prepare the material for release.
"He wanted me to pull it together, and because of the scope of the job, he knew it would take a long time," Salinger said of his father, who died in 2010 and had not published work since the mid-1960s.
"This was somebody who was writing for 50 years without publishing, so that's a lot of material. So there's not a reluctance or a protectiveness - when it's ready, we're going to share it."
Salinger says any new work might be years away and did not cite any specific titles or plots. He did indicate that the Glass family, made famous in such fiction as Franny And Zooey would be seen again.
"I feel the pressure to get this done, more than he did," he said.
JD Salinger published just four books in his lifetime - Nine Stories, The Catcher In The Rye, Franny And Zooey and a volume with the two novellas Raise High The Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction. T
The last work to come out in his lifetime was the story Hapworth 16, 1924, which appeared in The New Yorker in 1965.
Over the past half century, rumours and speculation intensified, from whether any work existed to whether it was of publishable quality.
A former lover, Joyce Maynard, and Salinger's daughter, Margaret, have both written that the author continued to work on books, allegedly stored in a vault in the author's home in Cornish, New Hampshire.
Australian Associated Press