The Catcher in the Rye
discussion
Did anyone else just not "get" this book?

But now years later I have a feeling I wouldn't like it again :))
for different reasons. Still I learned how to be a much more careful reader cause of this book!

http://reddkaiman.blogspot.com/

plus, i found the way he would repeat things and structure his sentences interesting... NOT LIKEABLE! but interesting. so yeah, what they ^ said, "This is a great book, if you can relate to it."

There are lots of "classics" that need context. I didn't "get" most of Dickens and any of George Eliot for years after I read them, especially Eliot. Understanding that the audience for novels in those days particularly among the English was the UPPER middle class means that novels about lower class people were striking and titillating. In better-educated America a wider range of people read, still, Herman Melville was writing Moby Dick at a time when some churches refused to admit seaman because of their supposed immorality, so they were a racy subject.

IT IS A REALLY GREAT BOOK i really love it :D
and i agree with those who like the book

It's from a teenagers point of vi..."
I don't really think so. I have felt alienated and depressed but I think that I kind of embraced that and started looking on the bright side. I really disliked Holden not because he was alienated and lonely but because he didn't do anything to change that! He kept talking how everyone was phoney, dumb and morons, how much he hated everything and basically didn't give anything a positive lookout. He reminded me of a friend I have that is miserable all the time, that hates everything and he's constantly misunderstood when in reality he just masochistic like that and WANTS to be regarded as lonely, alienated and special. The only character in this book I liked was Phoebe because she seemed like the only reasonable, intelligent person who finally put Holden in his place! So yeah, in my opinion, the problem is not in the reader it's in Holden, because you must be really immature to have an 8 year-old tell you what to do.

I'm not saying it isn't a good book, but it's just not one of my favorites.
Now I read the comment from "Angelo" and he just wrote it:"For someone that isn't in the teenage years, or for teens that don't feel depressed, alienated, or lonely, it doesn't really resonate with them." This is exactly my case



It's from a teenag..."
He really needed some support from people. It's really not his fault he became like this. I'm pretty sure he has seen better days. There's a reason why Holden is the way he is in the novel.

Interesting point. I've always been under the impression that you had to at least care about the lead character to continue reading. But I suppose if that was the case, why would American Psycho have done so well?





I know this is right in the middle of The Catcher in the Rye discussion, but this caught my eye and I have to respond to you George. Right on, Right on!! That whole segment was so beautifully written. That is EXACTLY how I feel about Moby Dick. This is my first reading (and by the way have been reading it for almost a year now) am currently on Capter 80. The Nut. You are so right! There are a few chapters I could have done without, but for me I will continue reading every single word that Melville has written in this book and decipher his hidden meanings as best I can. There ARE treasures hidden in here that I am so thankful I did not miss by skimming.


It's from a teenagers point of vi..."
Well said, Angelo, especially the part about: "The people can relate to him, he can say what they can't say."
I wonder how many of the people who just don't get CITR are avid readers of those fantasy stories about boys who fly around on brooms waving magic wands. (I tried reading one and couldn't get past page two. Then I rented the DVD and turned it off after ten minutes.)
The point I'm making is that some people may not want to engage with reality. It's a mystery to me.


The only difference between Holden's era (the 50s) and today is troubled teenagers screw like rabbits on steroids, say "fuck" in every other sentence, bury their noses in cell phones and video games (instead of reading), and have access to drugs like they were junkies (some actually are.) Try riding a city bus sometime, in the rear section where the ones who misbehave like to congregate.




A US colleague of mine read 'On The Road' and she didn't get it. Tried to explain and failed. But FGS you're American! I said. Still nope.
I guess there are some iconic books you either do or you don't.

I think my problem with the book was that I read it too late in life and therefore missed the impact it might have had at a different stage in my psychological growth.

I think 17 is pretty young to get a lot psychologically out of the book for most teens, unless you'd had experience, first-hand or otherwise, with a teen in an emotional crisis.
There's a lot of cultural and psychological meat in there though: a) how boys interact with each other when living in close quarters, b) particularly when two have or are dating the same girl and one feels protective of her (Jane Gallagher), c) how a sensitive boy might behave because of a deep emotional wound (e.g., PTSD from the trauma of losing a younger brother and from witnessing the suicide of a classmate (James Castle) and d) how that boy might become neurotically protective toward his younger sister (Phoebe) and toward children in general because of c).
Most teenagers aren't mature enough to comprehend the psychological ramifications of what I've just described unless they've been prepared for it by a mature adult who does comprehend. And there are many adults who couldn't.
Indeed, most adults have psychological defenses that don't allow them to comprehend what I've just described. It's either too abstract, too complicated or too scary. I suspect this is the main reason the book is so controversial. Most people don't get it because they can't, unless someone points the way.

I think 17 is pretty young to get a lot psychologically out of the book for mo..."
Some interesting points Monty. Makes you wonder why teens are given this book as required reading. I wasn't. I simply picked it up hoping for a good read. If everything you said is true, then I know why I didn't get it..... I read books purely for mindless enjoyment and I didn't put too much (if any) thought into what I was reading. I just wanted to be entertained when I read a book....... come to think of it, I'm still pretty much that way.


You raise an interesting point that resonates with something I posted.
Unless and until the reader has been traumatized or is close to someone who has been and is acting out because of it, I doubt the reader is capable of being reached by the book's deeper meaning.
Think of it this way. Many in the homeless population are Vietnam war veterans suffering from PTSD. Most people when they see these unfortunates withdraw in derision. "They smell bad" or "They're just lazy" are some comments I've overheard. Very few people will take the time to understand the homeless or have any interest in doing so.
Rex Walls from the memoir "The Glass Castle" is a real-life example of a homeless man who was suffering from PTSD stemming from childhood trauma (sexual molestation by his mother).
Unless you've been stung by a bee or seen someone stung you have little concept what a bee sting is. It's an abstract concept. But once you know, really KNOW, what a bee sting is, you'll take measures to protect children from bees.
The rest of the world will just go merrily along, blissfully unaware.



Which, most of teenagers could relate to. It is a good book, usually for those who can relate to it. :)
But now that I've seen that someone pointed out whats not appealing about it, well, that person had a point. It was about a whiny teenager.

I read it and I was like WTF??? Here is how it sounded to me:
"I'm a rich white boy and a f*ck up and whine, whine, whine poor me, poor rich white me..."
I just did not get it. But you have to realize some things are just generational...I think, for the baby boomers to hear a rich white boy just a whining the way Holden was...well for them, that was revolutionary and mind-blowing. You know they had grown up with all those picture perfect father knows best, Beaver Cleaver images and so, yeah...the books was probably one of the very first ever to really and truly keep it real.
As for us Gen Xers, well we were quite accustomed to rich white boys just a whining...it just wasn't that groundbreaking anymore. All of the Gen X teens were whining and crying about something...we really were.
Now as for me, while I was unimpressed with The Catcher, I just LOVED, LOVED, LOVED Franny and Zoey! One of my faves of all time!


Good point Serena. When I first read CATCHER at nineteen I was prejudiced against well-off people and dismissed Holden and his whining. Thirty-years later I had matured and had an entirely different experience. I still regard him as spoiled, but I see how he was suffering. People who have had it easy suffer more because they aren't conditioned to it. Suffering is a way of life for the poor.

Well of course a rich white boy or man has every "right" to be unhappy...but, at the time, I was wondering, why would he be?
He had so many more opportunities to find and explore happiness, as opposed to other groups of people who have far less resources at their disposal, but now, well, I realize, finding happiness is a lot more complicated than that.
It is especially complicated when you factor in clinical depression which we now have a far greater understanding of now, than we did in the sixties when my dad read the book, and even in the eighties when I read the book.
I have suffered from depression, and once I fully understood why that was, I did actually realize that it had nothing to do with poverty or race, but genetics and environment.
Still, when I read The Catcher, at about age sixteen, I was thinking, "if only I was this rich white boy, if only I had his life, his opportunities, I would not be so depressed." But that was actually a pretty shallow understanding of myself and what was wrong with me so you're right...pretty shallow. But hey! I was sixteen!
It never seemed to go anywhere. I always felt that the plot was going to develop and then it never did. I've got a copy, and will read it again sometime.

I'm one of the people who feels that a younger person might empathise with an older person just as well, or even better, than someone of the same age; and vice versa. The way we empathise with people - of any age - is because of the stuff we're made up of.
I also happen to think that literature, along with film, TV drama and lots of other art forms, is one of the ways we can explore our empathies and enjoy them.
Oliver Twist, for example, appeals to nine year olds and sixty-nine year olds alike
You HAVEN'T GOT to be young to relate to a Holden Caulfield type character, just as you HAVEN'T GOT TO relate to him - though you MIGHT HAVE TO sit in same classroom.

my brother really related to it somehow...
it's just that the train of Holden Caulfield's thoughts didn't appeal to me at all. it's like this whining and complaining and whining and complaining kind of thing over and over and over... although i still stuck out to read it coz it's a classic must read...

There are plenty of great plotless stories: Homer's "The Odyssey," "American Graffiti," "The Sun Also Rises" and "Crash" to name a few.
When there's no plot try focusing on character or characters. "Crash" has an ensemble cast. No main character. But there's lots of action, and by observing how the characters interact with each other and their environment a thread of universal truth emerges.

I could not agree with you more. This was the worst book I have ever read in my life!

There are plenty of great..."
Yep, and I hated "The Sun Also Rises" and loved "Crash!"
Monty J wrote: "Michael wrote: "It never seemed to go anywhere. I always felt that the plot was going to develop and then it never did. I've got a copy, and will read it again sometime."
There are plenty of great..."
I'm all for the plotless novel, I think it was the way it kept suggesting that something was going to happen and it never delivered. Yet, this was a long time ago when I read it, so I will read it again soon bearing in mind what you have said. So thankyou! :) I'll also read Crash at some point too.
There are plenty of great..."
I'm all for the plotless novel, I think it was the way it kept suggesting that something was going to happen and it never delivered. Yet, this was a long time ago when I read it, so I will read it again soon bearing in mind what you have said. So thankyou! :) I'll also read Crash at some point too.

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Beaucoup kudos, Ema. You're my hero. What an experience, cluing in someone to a clearer vision of literature. No telling where it will take him now. I'm envious of you.