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

Well said. Thank you.


A lot of the teen lingo from that era is hard to understand - and being Australian made it harder. I vaguely 'got it'.
...But I can't tell you what a catcher in the rye is.

On the anniversary of its publication, I remember reading a columnist saying much the same thing - that it's about a self-absorbed teenager.
But what it's really about is a kid who is mourning his brother's death, and doesn't have the words or understanding to talk about it.
There is actually an incredible taboo on talking about or understanding grief, mourning and death in North America, and this book takes a look at it through a boy's eyes just as he is on the edge of adulthood.
It was also have been the experience for millions of people who lost brothers in the Second World War, but who were expected to just get back to life as usual, when life was no longer usual, and when you are suffering from that kind of grief, it drains the joy out of life.
That's my take.




I read this book for class and we thoughts that it was about Holden needing to get help because he obviously needed it since he was always making suicide jokes. It was also about him wanting to keep children from the fall from innocence because he wants to be the catcher in the rye that keeps children from falling off of the big cliff. I think that Holden wants someone to notice something is seriously wrong with him but he doesn't know how to ask for help.
I could be completely wrong though.

Buddy Glass, along with most all of the Glass family members, struggles with misanthropy (general distrust/dislike of humanity) as a result of being so deeply conflicted by the inherent beauty of the world and its inhabitants' horrific response. The character Holden emulates this view perfectly. His wish to be a catcher in the rye -- someone who stops the children from crossing the line to adulthood -- is a mercy call at preserving the beauty and innocence of youth. The whole climax might be said to start (and end) with him seeing his little sister play, tears drenching his eyes as he witnesses the beauty of her innocence, the sincerity and purity of who she is. In other words, Holden's journey is one of enlightenment. When he sees his little sister, he experiences a deep, genuine love despite his misanthropic disposition.
Granted, I have spent way too much time reading, and re-reading, Salinger. But perspective helps.

In my PERSONAL experience/opinion, there are two types of people who like this book (everyone else doesn’t): ONE is the high-brow beatnik wannabes who use it as a condescending tool to speak down to those who actually enjoy good books (often doing so with vague references to other classic writers while engagin in drawn-out descriptions of the mundane details in Catcher) and TWO, people that have read maybe 6 books in their life (if that!) and bask in the mystique and the resulting nobility that goes along with claiming that this literary failure is their "favorite"... Next time you have a facebook addicted frat boy claim that Catcher is their "FAVORITE" book, ask them if they have read any other work by the author and inquire about how many other books they claim to have read...
Few people genuinely like this book, Salinger himself, certainly was not one of them. People have the right to think what they want of a certain book, some people like Mein Kemp... fine. However, as eloquently put by O Wilde, there are only two types of writing: Good and Bad. In my opinion, Catcher is in the latter category. Most readers did not enjoy Catcher, nor did they like it... and no amount of hype, high-browed explanation of its "real meaning" or high school force feeding will change the fact that when polled, 90%+ of people who love to read, hate Catcher...
And there... with a certain amount of pun intended, I must say "check mate, kind sir"

Completely agree! :)

Indeed, Salinger hated any and all attention. And, truthfully, I'm inclined to agree with the two types of people that "like" this book, unfortunately so. I'll add a third, however. This discussion, for the most part, focuses on whether or not someone "got it." I think you, along with just about everyone else, clearly "got" it. Instead, simply, you didn't "relate" to it. I, simply, filling that third category, related deeply to it.
P.s. I laughed out loud reading your comment about Mein Kampf. I have to admit, though I didn't have patience to finish it, I found it fascinating.

i agree with your assessment. i think, to many, it appears it is just about a boy who complains about EVERYTHING. but...i think the book runs deeper than that. it is about loss, innocence, etc. i think it was a timely book when it is written and i think it is appropriate for Gen Xers. i think we can all identify with holden, in some way, whether we notice it right off the bat or if it comes later. i believe in this book and, in fact, recently recommended it to my son, who is 11. although some may think he is too young (way too young perhaps) but he has been reading more 'mature' books for a few years. on a sidenote, what got him into older-people books was jaws, by peter benchley. his reading list and mine have some definie parallels. like father, like son.

I have an 11 year old son, who is very mature for his age, and he’s is an avid reader of numerous genre/topics. Assuming that you are aware -in detail- of the contents of Catcher, I would say that it is bordering on child abuse/neglect to allow an 11 year old to read about homosexuals, prostitutes, perverted sex, drug use, and suicide in alternatively derogatory and admirable fashions, as is done in this book. As a parent, I would STRONGLY urge you to reconsider your decision. Reading this book has had well documented ill-effects on impressionable minds... The VERY least of which may be a classification of everybody into the "phonie" and "non-phonie" camps as done by Holden, which is rediculous in real life. He’s obviously trying to please you… “Like-father, Like-son" is nothing more than a narcissistic exercise of the ego, leave the poor kid to be himself, what’s your next book suggestion? I’d hate to know… You seem to relish the fact that you are intuitively aware that your son is “maybe far too young” for this book, based on your posting, I have the impression you are playing a dangerous game not only in the case of your book recommendations, but probably in your overall approach to parenting.

Nietzsche and Kerouac were a lot more crucial to the casting off of my mental fetters as an adolescent, though I'm pretty sure I only superficially understood the former and perhaps overvalued the latter. Taking a couple of Robert Solomon's courses sorted me out on Nietzsche, but perhaps I should give Kerouac—and Salinger—another look.

But it also makes sense to me that if someone doesn't like J.D. Salinger (or Holden Caulfield, who is generally irritating to irritating people--e.g., Ed), then I probably won't like that person. Instant litmus test.

Amen


Your second paragraph is written badly and makes no clear sense. If it is your attempt at some type of condescending douchebaggery or personal attack, then I feel that it is inappropriate on this vine and deserves no response. Those types of attacks should be done in person where you may face resulting consequences in the first person as opposed to the anonymity of the web. Please be clear, refrain from personal attacks on goodreads members and stick to discussing the matter at hand, i.e.: Catcher in the Rye. People have the right to NOT like a book and not be the subject of high-browed condescension by those who supposedly "got it". By your definition, 90% plus percentage of readers are "phonies" that being the number of polled actual readers who dislike Catcher! Adieu mon ami...


But I'm posting because this book KEPT me from trying his other works for years, and that was a shame. I enjoyed them MUCH more and could have lived having read them, and never this. So don't be put off by Catcher if you don't like it, try one of his others, they're actually quite good.

I concur.

Thank you for a great review of a book I love. Well put! Indeed good taste.

Jaws is more of a horror novel. The Catcher in the Rye is a little more racy. I don't think it's appropriate for an 11 yr old. Even a mature one.

I love this book, but I'd never assign it to high school students, or, worse, students in junior high, which is when I was first assigned to read it. Read it as an adult, and think about exactly who it is in this novel that needs to be "caught." Then maybe you'll get it. Or maybe not ... but at least you won't be expecting Rebel Without a Cause.

You write: "I pity you, if you don’t get it...", "Sucks to be them" Wow! Spoken like a true bratty teenager. The immature comment deserves no response other than this: There are many readers who understand quite well, the things you are trying to condescendingly explain, but they still dislike the book (Salinger included) and consider it bad writing, and they are consistently in the 90%+ range when polled…


A lot of the teen lingo from that era is hard to understand - and bei..."
Oh wow I never thought of what a person outside the US might think. At least we have some idea as movies or our grandparents have used some of the slang. Although the new generation might have way less exposure to the slang.


Yeah I think one needs to read it in their teens. I read it couple of years ago - and I'm in my 50s, didn't get it either, that said my wife read it while she was at school and she loved it! So there you go.

In my understanding, he is a lonely teenager looking for someone to t..."
I think out of all of us here, though I'm not a teenage boy, I may have the most in common with the teenager that Holden was at the start of this book. And let me tell you, I hated (and still hate) this book. And before someone suggests that I read it again....I have read it 3 times, and while it didn't suck quite as terribly the last two times, it still generally is one of the worst books I've ever read. I read this in high school...where I went to boarding school in New England, and was often alone outside of it. I'd been to NY and explored several times as well. I think like a few people said above - the people who like this book end up being nothing like Holden. His relatively privileged life and his mind are like two separate people who have nothing to do with each other. Holden is essentially an old hermit's view of what a disillusioned teenager would be like if he could possess him for a short while. Its awful and I hated his attitude.
The thread I replied to is really the only humanizing and realistic thread of this book I saw - and as a kid who didn't live at home, I can empathize with that desire to connect with another. But that's it.




But, I have read it three or four times for a variety of reason and have never ever related or like the novel.


I cannot understand why so much as been made about this book...i struggled through it...thought of giving up many times...but plodded on....and at the end I thought...yes what is this book really about I wonder? Someone mentioned that it was written for the generation of it's time...perhaps Harry Potter, Twilight etc will be the classics of our time and in 50 years time someone will probably wonder the same thing we do....does anyone think that the surge of interest in the book happenned because of john lennon's death and the crazy man having a copy of this book with him?





Pure poetry!
This grabastic waste of paper pulp has been riding the coat-tails of its own undeserved reputation for far too long!

Well said South Park!

all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
The Thirty-Nine Steps (other topics)
Out of Revolution: Autobiography of Western Man (other topics)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (other topics)
Nicholas and Alexandra: The Classic Account of the Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (other topics)
More...
John Green (other topics)
J.D. Salinger (other topics)
Books mentioned in this topic
Bambi: A Life in the Woods (other topics)The Thirty-Nine Steps (other topics)
Out of Revolution: Autobiography of Western Man (other topics)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (other topics)
Nicholas and Alexandra: The Classic Account of the Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
J.D. Salinger (other topics)John Green (other topics)
J.D. Salinger (other topics)
Just want to let you know what a breath of fresh air your comments are to read. Thank you.