The Catcher in the Rye

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The Catcher in the Rye

by J. D. Salinger
19462 members / 0 friends / 62 groups / 674 reviews / 457 tags
Since his debut in 1951 as The Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield has been synonymous with "cynical adolescent." Holden narrates the story of a couple of days in his sixteen-year-old life, just after he's been expelled from prep school, in a slang that sounds edgy even today and keeps this novel on banned book lists. It begins,

"If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you'll probably want to know is where I was born and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don't feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth. In the first place, that stuff bores me, and in the second place, my parents would have about two hemorrhages apiece if I told anything pretty personal about them."
His constant wry observations about what he encounters, from teachers to phonies (the two of course are not mutually exclusive) capture the essence of the eternal... see complete book description

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  • Rated 4.013978 stars

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  • Rated 4 stars

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  • Bianca D

    bianca d says

    I identified with this book when I was in my teens, and somewhat still do. Just a great classic book.

    posted 6 days ago

    (read bianca d’s review)

  • Mike B)

    mike b) says

    I read CATCHER when I was 17. After that, I couldn't get enough of what I perceived as 'honesty' in writing; got all of Salinger's books and then moved on to Sartre's AGE OF REASON.

    posted 2 weeks ago

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

  • madonna t

    madonna t says

    i really don't think there is a right time to read the book its just how open u r to it(don't worry i'll spare u the lecture)but the thing that appealed to me the most was his frankness,a weird sense of humour and his taste are quite similar to mine.

    posted 2 weeks ago

    (read madonna t’s review)

  • Mr. Ayer

    mr. ayer says

    To any of you looking for a somewhat modernized version of Salinger's novel, check out Jonathan Safran Foer's 'Extremely Loud, Incredibly Close'. It's one of the best novels I've read this year, and another to read before or after would be Kurt Vonnegut's 'Slaughterhouse-Five'. Happy summer reading!

    posted 3 weeks ago

  • Derek H

    derek h says

    I agree that there's a right time to read this book -- but I think that "right time" is high school. I first read it when I was in junior high and I was crazy about it. I've since read it several times and loved it every one.

    I'm sure it doesn't speak to everyone the same, but I am of the camp that this is the ultimate coming-of-age book. Read it too late and you just won't be able to "get it."

    I think the fact that it's _assigned_ to people in school is what makes them hate it. I can't remember ever reading an assigned book in highschool that I loved. It took a couple years to kick that everything-anyone-tells-me-to-do-sucks attitude. Context is everything.

    posted 3 weeks ago

  • AheartsU

    aheartsu says

    Speaking as an official WASP... I LOVE THIS BOOK!!!! It's all about questioning yourself and trying to find your way. It's a great book to read at anytime. It's not forced upon high schoolers to compare other books to... it's a good thing for them to read so they can learn about themselves.

    posted 3 weeks ago

  • Selina C

    selina c says

    It's really a book only an atheist could love. I read it as a parody of angsty depressed spoilt teenager with an attitude problem and no clue about life.

    I was just reading Salingers wikipedia entry - quite interesting. 'Catcher' is semi-autobiographical. Later on he did not grow up to be a hack journalist, (too famous and well-paid for that) but became a recluse and later got mixed up with Scientology. I can totally believe Holden would end up the same. He would have been one of those people who ends up with a job he hates in working in an office, or an alcoholic in a love-less marriage. (if he had not killed himself)

    I also agree with katiebee about high school teachers choice. I was forcefed sci-fi, which I hated. I personally don't think it should be taught in schools, unless they are schools of psychiatry lol.

    posted 3 weeks ago

    (read selina c’s review)

  • -katiebee-

    -katiebee- says

    I loved this book! I read it a while ago... but I read it at the right time. I think that this is a book where timing is everything. If I had read it as a high schooler, of course I wouldn't appreciate it. You know? We also won't sell this book to old people... simply because it definitely isn't the right time for them.

    I also think it a bit funny that people that aren't writers themselves are saying that it is "BAD writing." It's not bad, it's just not to your taste. If you want to read a really grueling book, read Scarlet Letter. That book will make you not want to read... ever again.

    Also... Ari, I have to criticize high school teacher's choice in books. They pick what THEY like, not necessarily what is best for the kids they teach. They need to relate to students more, instead of force feeding them their fav. books. It makes kids hate classics... It's very sad.

    -katie-

    posted 3 weeks ago

  • Ari

    ari says

    I sooo love to hate it. I think they put it in the high school curriculum so people will know what NOT to read and what BAD writing looks like. We get to see the contrast with the other books we'd be reading for the rest of our lives and we'll think to ourselves, "Hey, this isn't so bad, it's not like Catcher in the Rye...."

    posted 3 weeks ago

    (read ari’s review)

  • diddle D

    diddle d says

    Haha maybe if he doesn't commit suicide first;) Perhaps you didn't like the writing language because it is aaaall slang.I have never read a book that consists of so much phrases like "Chrissake" , "Bastard" etc and that annoyed me a lot:(The only thing possitive and sweet was his relationship with his little sister,I agree :)

    posted 3 weeks ago

    (read diddle d’s review)

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