A teenager reads The Catcher in the Rye, then decides to read Franny and Zooey, then wants to read everything ever written by J.D. Salinger — only to discover that there’s nothing left after Nine Stories and Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction. Such “Salingermania” may be a cliche, but it is so for a reason: Salinger’s work has been able to speak to the lost and angsty for generations. The Catcher in the Rye (to use the most well-known example) is one of the few classic novels that can sit a 14-year-old down and say to him or her, “Shit sucks, but I’ve been there too.”

With the arrival of a new Salinger biography and documentary, Salingermania has reemerged for readers of all ages. Fans are suddenly learning that Salinger only had one testicle and may have married a Gestapo informer, but the most exciting discovery is that more of his books are on the way. Still, we will all have to be patient because the unpublished work won’t be out for another three to seven years.

In the meantime, though, you can enjoy more Salinger stories than you may be aware of. The author published many more short stories than were included in Nine Stories, and there’s a 207-page trove of 22 out-of-print pieces available online. (Mind you, these may or may not have been published with permission from the copyright owners; we did not publish them, and we do not encourage infringement.) Of those 22, here are 10 particularly interesting ones:

Salinger’s First Published Short Story