Wednesday, October 2, 2019
The Catcher in the Rye - J.D. Salinger as Holden Caulfield :: Catcher Rye Essays
      The Catcher in the Rye - J.D. Salinger as Holden Caulfield                       The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger, is home to the protagonist Holden  Caulfield.  There is no coincidence that he holds a striking resemblance to  the author of the novel himself.  Salinger seemed to have a similar  childhood as Holden describes in The Catcher in the Rye.  Both men also  seemed to have a certain fascination with younger children, especially younger  women.  J.D. Salinger based one of his most famous characters, Holden  Caulfield, on personal experience.                  Holden's story in The Catcher in the Rye begins with  Holden at his school, Pencey Preparatory, which is a boarding school.  He  was sent there by his parents, who seemed to be withdrawn from his life.   Similarly, Salinger's parents sent him to Valley Forge Military School, where he  had a neighbor who always seemed to be barging in, showing a resemblance to  Ackley.  The reader learns that Holden is the son of wealthy parents from  New York.  It turns out that J.D. Salinger was also born in New York to  upper-class parents.  It seems as though Holden Caulfield's childhood is an  identical match to that of J.D. Salinger's.                Salinger had a deep love and fascination with young  children, especially young women.  In the 1970s, Salinger maintained a  close connection with an eighteen year-old girl, Joyce Maynard, who eventually  moved in with the author. J.D. Salinger continued to have many relations with  younger women, much like this one.  His fascination with young women is  reflected in Holden, who has a similar mind-set.  Even as a seventeen  year-old, Holden is infatuated with his perception of Jane Gallagher as a little  girl.  It is this picture of innocence that Holden is in love with, and not  what Jane is like now.  The concept of, "the catcher in the rye," itself  projects his interest in children.  He day-dreams about standing at the  edge of the rye field catching any children that are too close to the edge of  the cliff.  					    
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