In many ways for some people,
(it depends on the individual person/personality/personal experience)
The common ways persons relate to Holden are through his characteristics and events that the persons can relate to feeling and experiencing. F. Ex:
1. Feeling alone.
2. Being constantly ignored.
3. Being made less by others.
4. Feeling others are fake. (Or as he puts it 'phony')
5. Fear/dislike of change.
6. Missing a dead person of positive significance (Holdens Brother.)
7. Wanting to feel 'innocent' like.. the way you used to look at the world as a child.
8. Wanting to talk to someone but NO one cares!!
9. You're a sociopath. (Not necessarily...)
Sorry. But the book has this reputation.
10. Again you're pretty darn alone.
If you still cannot relate/understand Holden and his actions/thoughts. Well then you probably won't ever be able to. And I even think that's a good thing.
Unfortunately I find myself indentifying with Holden all the time. I had it crappy like him.. But anyway yeah hope this helped.
Holden little brother is Allie. He pasted due to leukemia on July 18,1946 while the family was in Miane. He was very smart with red hair.
Holden treats little kids with an amused gentleness. The reader gathers that he likes, and respects young kids ("They kill me"). He also feels very protective of them.
"The catcher in the rye" symbolizes who Holden wants to be. As he describes it to Pheobe, he wants to be someone who catches kids, who are playing in a field of rye, from falling off a cliff. This symbolizes that Holden wants to keep kids in their innocence and prevent them from having to deal with maturity and the pains that follow it. This in turn shows that Holden can't deal with growing up.
the resolution in the catcher in the rye is that Holden realizes that he can not save kids from falling in to rye, which symbolizes adulthood. he also realizes that he cannot change the world which it has been for a long time. all he could do at the end was to go home.
he didn't want the little kids to see it and start using it, therefore making them "unclean" and losing their innocense
Standing in a field of rye, near a cliff, is Holden's dream job. His function would be to watch out for the kids playing in the field, and if one of them strays too close to the cliff, to catch them and bring them back to safety. It symbolizes Holden's idealized dream of keeping kids from growing up too fast.
Well catcher of the rye isn't anyone's name in the book...so I'm guessing you are talking about Holden Caulfield? If you are, then no, he did not want to grow up. He felt that growing up would destroys innocence, and that adults are phony (as he says multiple times in the book.) He wants to be the Catcher in the Rye, which is a person that stopped kids from losing their innocence and falling into the adult world.
Holden treats little kids with care and kindness, as he values their innocence and sees them as pure. An example of this is when he takes his little sister Phoebe on the carousel in Central Park and watches her enjoy the ride, cherishing the moment and wanting to protect her from the harsh realities of the world.
There are all these kids running around in a field, and Holden has to catch them from falling of the cliff. Hence the catcher in the rye.
Catcher in the Rye is what Holden tells Phoebe he wants to be when he gets older. He will save kids from falling when they are playing by a cliff.
He wants to be the Catcher in the Rye He feels the need to save the little kids that are playing in the rye fields from falling off the cliff or another way to say it would be saving the kids from falling from innocent children into adults.
rye is a type of wheat what he means is little kids running in the tall rye thay wont be able to see where they are going so holden will catch them before they fall the cliff
"The catcher in the rye" symbolizes who Holden wants to be. As he describes it to Pheobe, he wants to be someone who catches kids, who are playing in a field of rye, from falling off a cliff. This symbolizes that Holden wants to keep kids in their innocence and prevent them from having to deal with maturity and the pains that follow it. This in turn shows that Holden can't deal with growing up.
Holden is upset because he views the profanity as a symbol of the adult world's corruption infiltrating the innocence of childhood. He is protective of children and resents the hypocrisy and phoniness of adults around him. The curse words on the wall represent the loss of purity and authenticity in the world, which Holden finds distressing.
the resolution in the catcher in the rye is that Holden realizes that he can not save kids from falling in to rye, which symbolizes adulthood. he also realizes that he cannot change the world which it has been for a long time. all he could do at the end was to go home.
Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of The Catcher in the Rye, experiences feelings of alienation, anger, and confusion. He struggles with his own identity and feels disconnected from the society around him, leading to mental distress and a sense of isolation. Overall, Holden's physical state of mind is one of turmoil and inner conflict.
he didn't want the little kids to see it and start using it, therefore making them "unclean" and losing their innocense
Holden Caulfield expresses his desire to be the "catcher in the rye" during a conversation with his sister, Phoebe, when he explains his fantasy of wanting to protect children from falling off a cliff while playing in a field of rye. He sees himself as a guardian who catches kids before they lose their innocence and fall into the adult world's complexities and corruption.
When I was a child, we got a healthy treat, such as a little box of SunMaid raisins.