I don’t like Holden Caulfield. I don’t hate him either. I’m not sure what I’d say if I met him but I would like to meet him anyway. From reading The Catcher in the Rye, I daresay he’s one of the most interesting characters I have ever come across in books.

Holden is not your normal teenager. In fact, I do not really know how normal a teenager is. But he certainly is different from the rest as he has already been expelled from a few boarding schools since he has not done well in his studies. He decides to leave school a little earlier and so spends a few days hanging out in New York before going home to face his parents who will be upset to know that he has been kicked out of school again.

The novel is basically Holden’s narration of his time spent in New York during the course of a few days along with his thoughts and opinions of the rest of the world. The hilarious part of the story, for me, was how he considered almost everyone and everything as being phony. His school was a phony, his headmaster was a phony, his parents were phonies, his older brother, D.B.’s a phony. Almost everyone is a phony to him except his younger sister Phoebe, his younger brother Allie who died of leukemia, his friend Jane and these two nuns who he met in New York.

Holden believed that once somebody grows up, he or she automatically loses his or her innocence and consequently becomes a phony in pursuit of materialism. Therefore he wants to be some sort of a catcher who prevents children from falling into the world of all things phony. He wants to help the children preserve their innocence.

As I read the novel, I know why it has been banned so many times since it was published. Profanity is abundant throughout the story as Holden likes to use them a lot. It seems that he uses them frequently to sound mature and to show that he knows what he’s talking about. Unfortunately it only shows his immaturity and unreliability. He tends to digress a lot too as he does not like to stick to one topic.

I really like this novel. It’s written in a conversational manner so you feel as if Holden is speaking to you. He is indeed speaking to somebody – his shrink actually. If you thought that some parts or most of the novel was repetitive, it’s because of Holden who’s suffering from a mental breakdown. Perhaps that’s one reason why he tends to ramble a lot.

After finishing the book, I wondered if it has been adapted into a movie. Guess what, J.D. Salinger has not sold the movie rights to any filmmaker ever since the book’s publication in 1951 so there’s no movie on it. Yet, I think. So far there are some amateur adaptations on YouTube. Do check out this one though. It’s good. This too.

Anyway, it would be a contradiction towards the book if a movie is made based on it. Holden hates the movies as he thinks they are phony too.

Other reviews: The Book Chick, 1001 Books

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Read, Remember, Recommend calls itself a reading journal for book lovers and that’s just what it definitely is! But why do we need it, you may ask. Let me tell you why. This journal is something I or any book lover would love to have because with it, we can keep track of our reading and our thoughts on our favourite books. It sounds like a fact, doesn’t it? :)

I’ve searched online before for such reading journals as I was interested to get one for myself. Yeah, I’ve visited Amazon to check out the reading journals on sale and Read, Remember, Recommend was one of them. So imagine my ecstasy when Sourcebooks sent me this amazing journal for review.

There are six parts in the journal plus the introduction. You could read the intro section to help you get started with it. However, the bulk of the book would be Awards and Notable Lists where there are numerous lists of books that have won or were nominated in bookish awards such as the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Awards, the National Book Critics Circle Awards, the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award, Salon Book Award for Fiction and the Richard & Judy Book of the Year Award. If you want to get familiar with award-winning books, this is the place to turn to. Some blank lists are also provided for you to fill in your own favourite lists of books.

Besides, with the To Read section, you can keep track of books that you want to read. Judging by the number of books out there, the five pages available will not be sufficient to write them all.

As it is a reading journal after all, the third section is Journal Pages. But I think you can only fill in around 67 books in the provided boxes and columns. Some of them have more lines for you to write in and I suggest you leave them for books where you have more opinions on.

The sections that follow are Recommendations, Loaner Lists and Resources. You can use the recommendations list to record books that you want to suggest to your family, friends and anyone else. If you always lend out your books, then keep track of them in the Loaner Lists. At least you will know and remember who you lent your favourite books to. A friend of mine lent one of her Harry Potter books and couldn’t figure out the borrower! Finally with the Resources section, check out the book-related websites and blogs. You may even find some of your favourite book blogs listed there! Who knows, maybe YOUR blog is there. Now how cool is that?

The journal is reader-friendly with an attractive cover that book lovers can identify with. Duh, the stacks of books! :D I also love the spiral-bound feature, which makes it easy to leave the book open without holding on to it. There are also coloured tabs at the sides so you can quickly flip to any section you want.

I will use the journal mainly for suggestions on what to read next since there are more than 2,500 cross-referenced great books recommended in there. Alright, I’m going to continue using this journal by checking off the books which I already own or have read. I am also going to familiarise myself with the best books on earth in the process of becoming a well-read person. Hopefully!

***Thanks to Carrie Gellin of Sourcebooks for sending me this book to review. You can visit Rachelle’s website for further details on this book.

Other reviews: Book Journey, Books Like Breathing, A Bookworm’s World

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