Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • When Holden inevitably drives both Sally and Carl away, he once again begins to feel sad and alone, and this causes him to think about his dead brother, Allie. As a result, he decides to go home so that he can speak to perhaps the only person he actually likes—his little sister Phoebe.
      www.litcharts.com/lit/the-catcher-in-the-rye/themes/alienation-and-meltdown
  1. People also ask

  2. Given that he believes the world to be filled with "phonies," Holden does not feel negatively about the isolation he faces. In fact, his isolation is self-imposed.

  3. The obvious signs that Holden is a troubled and unreliable narrator are manifold: he fails out of four schools; he manifests complete apathy toward his future; he is hospitalized, and visited by a psychoanalyst, for an unspecified complaint; and he is unable to connect with other people.

  4. Throughout his three-day solo stint in New York City, he frequently experiences feelings of depression and isolation, and during one of these moments he even speaks out loud to Allie, addressing his deceased younger brother simply to make himself feel less alone.

  5. Holden is a virgin, but he is very interested in sex, and, in fact, he spends much of the novel trying to lose his virginity. He feels strongly that sex should happen between people who care deeply about and respect one another, and he is upset by the realization that sex can be casual.

  6. How does Holden feel about Jane? Jane never actually appears in the novel, but Holden repeatedly mentions her and clearly indicates how important she is to him. Holden and Jane met and spent a lot of time together when their families stayed in the same neighborhood for summer vacation, and, ever since, Holden has felt respect and adoration for ...

  7. Alone and confused, Holden now tortures himself by second-guessing his very reasonable reaction, blaming himself for running away from one of the only people who seems to truly care about him.

  1. People also search for