Holden And Phoebe essay topics

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  • Principal Of Holden's High School
    1,305 words
    In JD Salingers' Catcher in the Rye, a troubled teenager named Holden Cau field struggles with the fact that everyone has to grow up. The book gets its title from Holden's constant concern with the loss of innocence. He did not want children to grow up because he felt that adults are corrupt. This is seen when Holden tries to erase naughty words from the walls of an elementary school where his younger sister Phoebe attended. "While I was sitting down, I saw something that drove me crazy. Somebod...
  • Holden's True Love Children
    1,481 words
    Holden's True Love Children: spirited, loveable, cute, and something that a society could not live without. But when ones life is so rotated around children like JD Salinger's Catcher in the Rye character, Holden, one loses all conscious and can only find happiness when with children or thinking about them. Holden can only find genuine love in children, for they have not learned the dreadful prerequisite of life, "phoniness". He hates the artificiality that adults eventually acquire because all ...
  • Holden
    362 words
    Holden Caulfield is a sixteen-year-old prep school student who has flunked out of school the week before Christmas. Several days before he's expected home for Christmas vacation, he leaves school, planning to spend some time on his own in New York City where he lives. Though Holden is friendly with many people at school, and though he has several friends in New York, he's constantly lonesome and in need of someone who will sympathize with his feelings of alienation. The person Holden feels close...
  • Holden And Phoebe
    1,258 words
    The protagonist, Holden Caulfield, interacts with many people throughout J.D. Salinger's novel The Catcher in the Rye, but probably none have as much impact on him as certain members of his immediate family. The ways Holden acts around or reacts to the various members of his family give the reader a direct view of Holden's philosophy surrounding each member. How do Holden's different opinions of his family compare and do his views constitute enough merit to be deemed truth Holden makes reference...
  • Phoebe's School
    1,102 words
    Over 50 years ago, an author named J.D. Salinger wrote one of the best novels that I have ever read. This story is entitled, The Catcher in the Rye. The Catcher in the Rye is an excellent story narrated by the main character, Holden Caulfield. Holden is a confused 16 year old, who is struggling to find himself. He is a very cynical and hypocritical young man. Throughout the entire story, Holden points out all of the flaws of every person he is associated with, and actually says that he dislikes ...
  • Depressing To Holden
    448 words
    It is in the early hours of Monday morning when Holden returns Grand Central Station. He decides to sleep on one of the benches in the waiting room because he has nowhere else to go. He wakes around nine, as the hustle and bustle of the working day begins. He thinks about the night before and the incident with Mr. Antolini; he wonders if he has misinterpreted Antolini's touch. Disturbed by these though, he tries to think of something else. He reads a magazine someone has left behind. It is some ...
  • Holden's Feelings
    1,540 words
    The novel The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger, is about a troubled young man named Holden Caulfield. Holden searches his teenage life, struggling to find answers to his questions about himself and his identity. No matter where Holden goes, in his opinion he is surrounded by phonies. They appear to be everywhere Holden is: his school, the hotel, the theatre, and all over the streets of New York. The story is told from Holden's point of view, as he endeavours to put together the pieces of the...
  • Boy Holden
    2,123 words
    The novel The Catcher In The Rye, by J.D. Salinger, contains many complex symbols, many of the symbols in the book are interconnected. A symbol is an object represents an idea that is important to the novel. I believe the most important symbol in this novel is Holden's idea of being the "catcher in the rye". Holden Caulfield, the main character in the novel, is not the typical sixteen year old boy. Holden has many characteristics that aren't typical of anyone that I know. Holden is very afraid o...
  • Moral Emptiness And Irrelevance Of Holden's World
    1,002 words
    Hello, is Salinger There? J.D. Salinger's only published full-length novel, The Catcher in the Rye, has become one of the most enduring classics of American literature. The novel's story is told in retrospect by the main character, Holden Caulfield, while staying in a psychiatric hospital in California. This is a coming of age tale that is wrought with irony. Holden Caulfield, Mr. Antolini, and Phoebe are the main symbols of irony. The first and most obvious subject of irony is the novel's prota...
  • Holden
    1,575 words
    Growing Pains Many people have many problems, but there is one in particular. It is growing up. Most children want to grow up in a hurry so that they can take part in the adult aspect of having fun. Except adulthood is not at all about fun and games. And when children venture into adulthood they lose the sense of purity and innocence that encompasses them as a child. Children have a sense of this utopian world of theirs when they reach adulthood; however, adulthood is actually all about sacrific...
  • Holden His Duties As The Catcher
    1,176 words
    In J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, there are many themes that are perceptible, however the most dominant theme was embedded in the title of the book. This is why in this essay I will address the significance of the title of this book. At the very outset, I will like to state what the title signified. The title established Holden Caulfield, the protagonist's obligations in life, as stated by himself. Holden wished to serve humanity by safeguarding the innocence and purity of children, by prot...
  • Holden's Life
    1,389 words
    ... ally flawless human being and even though has passed away, he still lives on in Holden's life. He places Allie on a pedestal, and regularly talks to him out loud. Phoebe is his pride and joy and respects her in every way. He sees them with a perfect life and envies their childhood. His joy comes out of his memories and reminisces with the past when he used to play with them, which he always does. Everything he encounters, he compares and contrasts it with his two younger siblings. 5. Stradle...
  • Gold Ring On The Carousel And Holden
    658 words
    Natures first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leafs a flower; But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides to leaf. So Eden sank to grief, So dawn goes down to day. Nothing gold can stay. -Robert Frost Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost exemplifies the loss of innocence. The poem displays how you are pure and innocent when you are a child but as you mature, it is impossible to remain this way. In The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Holden will soon realize that nothing gold ...
  • More Holden
    1,085 words
    The Psychological Message of J.D. Salingers The Catcher in the Rye A novel, like a movie, is a form of entertainment; however, some novels do a great deal more than entertain. Some pack an emphatic psychological message. An illustration of such a publication is Mark Trains The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In addition, Ken Kasey's One Flew Over the Cook oos Nest is a narrative with a comparable central theme. J.D. Salingers The Catcher in the Rye is yet another instance of a story with an infl...
  • Allie And Holden
    1,386 words
    The Catcher in the Rye Essay #1 From the time children that children come out of their mothers womb, they are caught. At playgrounds, mothers hands are always outstretched; ready to catch their young ones incase they fall off a swing or a seesaw. The parents protect their children until they think that they are old enough to fend for themselves and grow up. Holden Caulfield, however, wanted to protect all innocent people, and protect them forever, never letting them move on. He couldnt think of ...
  • Classic Holden Caulfield
    1,912 words
    Theme and Character Since the beginning of time there have been billions of books written. From those books have come novels. From the novels have come masterpieces. From the masterpieces have come critically acclaimed titles. From those critically acclaimed titles have come classics. Classics represent the highest acknowledged standard of writing. The ingenuity of their literary elements is impeccable. A classic will inspire, intrigue, enlighten, and more importantly draw the reader into the wo...
  • Old Mans Moment Of Enlightenment
    1,022 words
    Catcher and the Rye versus Old Man and the Sea Both novels share the theme of a voyage which leads to complicated psychological hostility bringing about emotional upheaval and enlightenment. In The Catcher and the Rye, there are many moments when Holden Caulfield withstands serious psychological conflicts. Throughout the novel, Holden is trying to find himself. He neglects his duties as a student to prolong his journey to adulthood. During this search for identity, interesting obstacles approach...
  • Picture Mental Breakdown Edmond Hotel
    504 words
    Leaving Pence Prep: Holden is recuperating from a mental breakdown in a Californian hospital. He tells he had been expelled from school. He has not done anything particularly bad, but just seems unable to work hard enough. He visits Mr. Spencer, this makes him depressed. Stradlater asks Holden to write his English homework, because he has a date with Jane Gallagher. Holden writes an essay about his brother Allie, but Stradlater is not happy with this. Holden does not want Stradlater to go out wi...
  • Next Day Holden
    406 words
    A Catcher In The Rye - Summary The Catcher in the Rye is narrated by Holden Caulfield, a sixteen year-old boy recuperating in a rest home from a nervous breakdown, some time in 1950. Holden tells the story of his last day at a school called Pencey Prep, and of his subsequent psychological meltdown in New York City. Holden has been expelled from Pencey for academic failure, and after an unpleasant evening with his self-satisfied roommate Stradlater and their pimply next-door neighbor Ackley, he d...
  • Holden Leaves
    2,967 words
    "The catcher in the rye" written by J.D. Salinger Holden Caulfield tells his story from a rest home where he has been staying ever since he had his nervous breakdown. The reader immediately senses his rebellious nature when he says that he will not tell about his "lousy" childhood and "all that David Copperfield kind of crap". Instead he describes his parents as -- they are nice, but "touchy as hell". He also mentions his brother, D.B., who is working in Hollywood as a writer. He doesn't respect...

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