Author: J.D. Salinger
Contemporary
Holden Caulfield has been expelled from Pencey Prep, the latest in a string of schools that have failed to hold his interest or his respect. Instead of going home to face his parents, he spends three days wandering New York City, encountering cab drivers, old teachers, nuns, prostitutes, and his own relentless inner monologue. Everything is "phony." Everyone is a fraud. The adult world is a conspiracy of pretense, and Holden wants no part of it.
But beneath the cynicism and the bravado is a boy in pain. Holden is grieving the death of his younger brother Allie, a loss he has never been allowed to process properly. His fantasy of being "the catcher in the rye" — saving children from falling off a cliff into adulthood — reveals his deepest fear: that growing up means losing everything that matters. He does not hate the adult world because it is phony. He hates it because it took Allie away and could not protect the innocence he still treasures.
Salinger's novel remains one of the most debated and beloved works in American literature. It is the original falling-away story: a boy who cannot reconcile who he is with the world he has been given, and whose struggle toward self-definition is as raw and unresolved as adolescence itself.