preview

Catcher In The Rye Failure

Decent Essays

This novel may seem very controversial but is actually quite a peculiar learning experience; the name of the novel “The Cather in the Rye,” by J.D. Salinger. “The Catcher in the Rye,” is about a sixteen-year-old boy named Holden Caulfield, who tries as much as he can to stay as a child and never become an adult. Holden is a unique character that makes the reader much more engaged; there are crucial elements that make the novel become into a learning reality. In “The Catcher in the Rye” what seems to be the most interesting thing throughout the novel is how the main character (Holden) develops as a person. This makes the reader more engaged because of the way Holland in no ordinary person but quite a peculiar one. He likes to be isolated …show more content…

That is his major failure because that causes him to push his friends and loved ones away. Holden has such a passion to be true to himself that he doesn’t care what people think about him, as long as everybody agrees with him they are no longer a phony, a sore, or a bastard. But throughout the book the reader can tell that his mental state and confidence starts to decrease. Not only that but one can tell that he does not only dislike society because they don’t agree with them but he can’t do what society does best. His failure is acting like an adult and not his true age, which just causes him to embarrass himself; in the end he’s just an innocent immature teen trying to be a kid forever. A demonstration of him trying to make himself as the innocent one is at the beginning of the book, where it states “Most guys at Pency just talked about having sexual intercourse with girls all the time but old Stradlater really did it. I was personally acquainted with at least two girls he gave time to; that’s the truth,” (J. D. Salinger 7). This is making him look like he’s innocent and everyone around is all wicked. But what the reader might not realize that within the conflict there is symbolism that the author leaves for the reader to interpret witch represents the abstract idea of the

Get Access