Why You Should Read The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger

the catcher in the rye follows william

caulfield’s faded attempts at human

connection and romanticized view on

childhood

initially published in 1951 the

coming-of-age tale is set in new york

city in the late 1940s

it is the story of a teenager and his

dramatic refusal to mature

narrated by its protagonist the novel

follows woman caulfield’s fourth

expulsion from an elite preparatory

school

as he recounts it from a hospital bed he

decides to leave school early and spend

a few days exploring new york city

before he goes home

most of the book follows woman

caulfield’s attempts to connect with

others before his self-protective

disgust

with the world destroys any connection

when he is able to interact with adults

he purchased before retreating into

isolation though he rejects the adult

world as phony

his encounters fail because he is unable

to act maturely when he does want to

reach out

making inappropriate decisions until the

other becomes annoyed or angry

the story’s climax culminates in

holden’s visit to his younger sister

phoebe

phoebe confronts holding angry that he

has once again been expelled

hogan responds by telling his sister

about his lifelong dream

for which the novel owes its namesake he

dreams of being the catcher in the rye

after robert burns poem he once read

someone who catches children before they

fall off the edge of an imaginary cliff

phoebe explains that he has

misremembered the poem causing holden to

question his entire interpretation of

adulthood

and therefore his belief system holden

decides to run away but the plan

quickly collapses when phoebe insists on

joining him

in the final scene holden watches as

phoebe rides a carousel

and along with all the other children

attempts to grab an unreachable golden

ring

through phoebe’s innocence holden no

longer feels threatened by his looming

adulthood and is finally at peace

holding coffee is an unreliable narrator

and there can be no denying it

he is judgmental to the point of

frustration criticizing and looking for

flaws in everyone around him

holden describes himself as trapped on

the other side of life trying

desperately to find his place in the

world he’s isolated from

holden maintains a cynical air of

superiority to protect himself and

distance himself

he is an unusual protagonist for a

coming of age and story

because he resists maturity and growing

up the novel centers around the loss of

innocence and alienation as a method of

self-preservation

the catch in the ride provides an

intimate glimpse into one of america’s

most reclusive writers

jd salinger undeniably autobiographical

is a deeper reflection of salinger’s

youth his complicated relation with

growing up

and the generational trauma affected by

world war two

silent joint drew on his personal

experiences fighting in the war

and his new york upbringing to pen the

character of holding caulfield

he was born in manhattan and with a

childhood much like caulfields

it was while he was enrolled at military

school that salinger began to write

under the covers with the aid of a

flashlight salinger was described as a

mediocre student

much like the failing caulfield after

graduation he attended new york

university in colombia

never graduating from either it was at

columbia however that salinger met his

future mentor

and the editor of story magazine with

burnett

salinger began to submit his short

stories to the new yorker for

publication consideration

after seven rejections they accepted

slight rebellion off madison in december

of 1941.

the story took place in manhattan and

was the first to feature holding

caulfield

an apathetic teenager with pre-war

jitters

unfortunately following the attack on

pearl harbor shortly after

the story was determined unpublishable

crushing salinger

it was eventually published after the

war in 1946

j.d salinger was drafted into the

american army in 1942

and fought in some of the most

influential battles of the war

in an infamous cruel twist of fate jakey

salinger began his military career on

d-day

storming the beaches of normandy with

slight rebellion of madison in his

pocket

it was during the war that salinger

wrote most of his short stories

featuring hoy and caufield

due to his proficiency in english french

and german

salinger worked in the

counterintelligence unit where he

interrogated prisoners of war

while on his first campaign from

normandy to germany salinger met

fellow writer and longtime inspiration

ernest hemingway

he participated in the liberation of the

covering for concentration

camp shortly after the defeat of germany

salinger was hospitalized for combat

stress reaction

his experience in the war in psychiatric

hospitals is present throughout his

writing

in their correspondence salinger told

hemingway about a play he was working on

and his dream to play the lead part

himself holding caufield

salinger’s former lover joyce maynard

explained the only person who might have

ever played woolen coffield would have

been jd salinger

and in 1943 sorry 1953 review

salinger called the novel slightly

autobiographical saying

my boyhood was very much the same as

that of the boy in the book

it was a great relief telling people

about it

after the release of the catcher in the

rye salinger published a few more

stories before hiding away and becoming

reclusive

on october 23 1992 the new york times

reported that not even a fire that

consumed at least half of his home on

tuesday

could smoke out the reclusive jd

salinger mr salinger is almost equally

famous for having elevated privacy to an

art form

he would eventually deny any

similarities between himself and holden

as the pro

as the press fought to invade his

personal and private life

the catcher in the ride became an

instant sensation met with equal

commendation and controversy

within two months of its initial release

the catch in the rye had been reprinted

eight times

it became the handbook for teenage

aloofness reactions range from praise

for salinger’s unusually brilliant first

novel

to criticism for the book’s open

allowance of prostitution and swearing

with a fan base nicknamed the catcher

coat the novel was banned in multiple

countries because of its subject matter

high school teachers who assigned the

book were forced to to resign or quit

it is the most frequently banned novel

across the united states while

simultaneously being the second most

frequently assigned

despite censorship no other character

has been identified within the

within western literature as holden

caulfield has

fifty years after its initial

publication the new yorker said that the

catcher in the rye rewrites itself

every generation defining its own

literary genre despite the growing

animosity between age groups and the

ever-present tension between parents and

their teenagers grandparents and their

grandchildren

salinger captured a universal and

timeless experience within the pages of

the catch in the rye

there is comfort and intergenerational

connections and the teenage identity

that is shared with them

through his regretfully honest novel jd

salinger created a piece of media

that is eternally relatable any

literature that can bridge gaps and

unite divide groups

must be celebrated