Monday, April 27, 2009

The Catcher in the Rye

Holden Caulfield is the main character in "The Catcher in the Rye" he is in the center of this adventurous tale of a misguided teens journey home. Reading this was far different that any other book I have ever read before. It goes against all of the normal guidelines that most books have. It seemed to be just a big journal or diary kept by Hold Caulfield himself.

Holden Caulfield has many problems in this novel. He is almost always depressed, often seems lonely, and hates pretty much everyone. He has a horrible attitude, he walks around with the attitude that he is better than everyone else and if you are not as good as him he doesn't like you. A perfect example is when his roomate, Marc Cross, has his suitcases out and Caulfield comments on how cheap his suitcases are. He makes the assumption that just because Cross's suitcases aren't as expensive as his he isn't as good as him. For a person to hate someone just because their suitcases are "cheap" is completely insane. That is just one example of Caulfield's attitude towards people, not just in this situation but throughout almost the entire novel.

When Caulfield is walking the streets one day he sees a family with a little boy walking in the street close to the curb singing the song "Catcher in the Rye" this is where the story gets his name. Caulfield says that this gets him happy and he is no longer depressed after hearing the little boy sing the song. This of course after he as trouble the night before with the woman he encountered. So, this brightens up his day when he hears the little boy singing. It amazed me how something so small can change his day around.

At points in the story Caulfield is very similiar to me to a person with a children's mindset. He always seems to ask simple questions and really wants to know the answers, like a child. Always asking question after question, usually with a simple answer or an answer to which no one really cares about or cares to find out about. Caulfield's famous question is "Where do you think the ducks in Central Park go when the water freezes?" He first asks this question when he is in a cab and tries making small talk with the driver. The driver thinks he is just playing around with him but Caulfield really is interested in the answer. This is not the only time when he asks this to someone. Caulfield sometimes takes on the mindset of a child with his simple questions, the simple things that excite him, and the extremely simple things that make him angry.

Focus: My first paragraph. I'm still having a hard time opening up these "free-write" blogs and don't know how well I'm doing with them.

2 comments:

  1. Ant, in my opinion i feel your first paragraph is very well written and descriptive toward the book. After reading your post i did start to get the feeling that this whole book really was just a big diary or journal by Caulfield himself. Great post i enjoyed it.

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  2. I think you did well with this. I would push you to consider not only the behaviors that Caulfield exhibits in the novel, but also to speculate towards the underlying causes behind them. Does Salinger point to the reason why Holden asks the questions he asks or passes the judgments that he does about others?

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