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- The Catcher in the Rye
- In J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, the first person
- narration is critical in helping the reader to know and understand
- the main character, Holden Caulfield. Holden, in his narration,
- relates a flashback of a significant period of his life, three days
- and nights on his own in New York City. Through his narration,
- Holden discloses to the reader his innermost thoughts and feelings.
- He thus provides the reader not only with information of what
- occurred, but also how he felt about what happened.
- Holden's thoughts and ideas reveal many of his character
- traits. One late Saturday night, four days before the beginning of
- school vacation, Holden is alone, bored and restless, wondering
- what to do. He decides to leave Pencey, his school, at once and
- travels to New York by train. He decides that, once in New York,
- he will stay in a cheap motel until Wednesday, when he is to return
- home. His plan shows the reader how very impetuous he is and how
- he acts on a whim. He is unrealistic, thinking that he has a
- foolproof plan, even though the extent of his plans are to take a
- room in a hotel.., and just take it easy till Wednesday.
- Holden's excessive thoughts on death are not typical of most
- adolescents. His near obsession with death might come from having
- experienced two deaths in his early life. He constantly dwells on
- Allie, his brother's, death. From Holden's thoughts, it is obvious
- that he loves and misses Allie. In order to hold on to his brother
- and to minimize the pain of his loss, Holden brings Allie's
- baseball mitt along with him where ever he goes. The mitt has
- additional meaning and significance for Holden because Allie had
- written poetry, which Holden reads, on the baseball mitt. Holden's
- preoccupation with death can be seen in his contemplation of a dead
- classmate, James Castle. It tells the reader something about
- Holden that he lends his turtleneck sweater to this classmate, with
- whom he is not at all close.
- Holden's feelings about people reveal more of his positive
- traits. He constantly calls people phonies, even his brother,
- D.B., who has sold out to Hollywood. Although insulting, his
- seemingly negative feelings show that Holden is a thinking and
- analyzing, outspoken individual who values honesty and sincerity.
- He is unimpressed with people who try to look good in other's eyes.
- Therefore, since it is obvious that Holden is bright, the reason
- for his flunking out of school would seem to be from a lack of
- interest.
- Holden has strong feelings of love towards children as
- evidenced through his caring for Phoebe, his little sister. He is
- protective of her, erasing bad words from the walls in her school
- and in a museum, in order that she not learn from the graffiti.
- His fondness for children can be inferred when he tells her that,
- at some time in the future, he wants to be the only grown-up with
- all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye
- and all. He'll stand on the edge of a cliff and catch anybody who
- starts to fall off the edge of the cliff. He got this image from
- his misinterpretation of a line from the Robert Burns poem, if a
- body catch a body comin' through the rye.
- When situations are described, in person or in a book, they
- are influenced by the one who describes them, and by his or her
- perceptions and experiences. Through Holden's expressions of his
- thoughts and feelings, the reader sees a youth, sensitive to his
- surroundings, who chooses to deal with life in unique ways. Holden
- is candid, spontaneous, analytical, thoughtful, and sensitive, as
- evidenced by his narration. Like most adolescents, feelings about
- people and relationships are often on his mind. Unfortunately, in
- Holden's case, he seems to expect the worst, believing that the
- result of getting close to people is pain. Pain when others reject
- you or pain when they leave you, such as when a friend walks off or
- a beloved brother dies. It would not have been possible to feel
- Holden's feelings or understand his thoughts nearly as well had the
- book been written in third person.
- <br><br>
- Words: 712
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