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Catcher In The Rye Quotes On Childhood

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The novel “Catcher in the Rye” was written by the well-known American author Jerome David Salinger. The book was released in 1951 and, though controversial, appealed to a great audience and was a general critical success. “Catcher in the Rye” is narrated by a young man named Holden Caulfield, who is undergoing treatment at a mental hospital. The novel is about the young character’s growth into maturity in life. Instead of confessing that adulthood scares and puzzles him, Holden develops a fantasy that adulthood is a world of shallowness and hypocrisy (“phoniness”), while childhood is a world of incorruptibility, inquisitiveness, and trustworthiness. Holden Caulfield is in a transition between the childhood and adulthood where he tries to find his true identity in the middle of a ‘false and phony’ society. Holden Caulfield is a typical teenager sceptical of all authority. In the book, Holden is portrayed as having very erratic and truculent …show more content…

He praises his small siblings, Phoebe and Allie since he sees them as the perfect people. Holden never really got over the death of his brother Allie, and his describes him as: “He was two years younger than I was, but he was fifty times as intelligent. He never got mad at anybody” . Holden clearly exaggerates when it comes to Allie, how smart can a child her age really be? He has this perfect image oh his little brother, so pure and innocent that he even says that he never got mad at anybody when actually children are much likely to get mad at people than adults. Phoebe is admired by Holden; “You should see her. You never saw a little kid so pretty and smart in your life. She’s really smart” . Holden talks about Allie and Phoebe as if they were a children’s prodigy, he seems them as the perfect people when actually he is just overrating them both due to his obsession for childhood. Holden portrays his siblings as sainthood

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