What a whirlwind tour of New York! And how depressing too. Holden just craved companionship, and at every chance he got he tried to hold on to it in order to hold off the loneliness that surrounded him like a cocoon... First we hopped on a train, ran into a classmates mother, spent the trip shooting the breeze with her, pretending to be someone else and got off at Penn Station in NYC... trying to think of someone, ANYone, to call and spend a little time with, but ending up not calling anyone. So we hopped in a taxi... Oops, Holden gave the taxi driver his real address- big mistake! He definitely doesn't want to deal with his parents just yet... so he asks the driver to turn around and go to this hotel. A depressing looking dive... And that's how the beginning of the story took off. Holden going down to the hotel lounge, spending some time with a few women, drinking and being rejected, again... then on to another bar, more drinking and even though he was surrounded by people, more rejection... Finally he gets himself a hooker, gets beat up, loses some money... spends some time with one of the guys from school, gets bored and calls an old girlfriend. Spills his guts about the way he feels, asks her to marry him and go away with him, gets rejected and ends up broke. By now, he decides to go home. See his sister, who really is his only ally... He sneaks home, spends time with his sister, still can't deal with seeing his parents, sneaks out... All I can say is that Holden Caulfield is a pretty interesting character. The situations he gets himself into are sometimes funny and sometimes a bit sad. He's trying to be all grown up, but he's really not... If only he could make that one connection, someone who would understand all his teenage angst... I can see why David California wrote 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye which is suppose to tell the story of Holden Caulfield 60 years after we turn the last page the Catcher in the Rye. The ending of the Catcher in the Rye leaves you wanting more! You want to find out what happened to Holden after he got home and finally confronts his parents! But in typical Holden style, and if you read J.D. Salinger's book you'll know what I mean, Holden says...
" That's all I'm going to tell about. I could probably tell you what I did after I went home... but I don't feel like it."
I wasn't sure how I would like the Catcher in the Rye when I first started reading it. Set, in the beginning, in a boy's prep school, I wasn't really that taken with the story right away. But Holden grew on me... and so did the story! I enjoyed my New York travels with Holden and would explore more of New York with him if I could... And if you haven't read the Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, I would recommend cracking the spine on this one!
Have you read the Catcher in the Rye? Tell me what you thought of the book, of Holden, of J.D. Salinger's decision to sue to stop the publication of David California's book, 60 Years Later!
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