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About The Catcher in the Rye
hough J.D. Salinger has written many short stories, The Catcher in the Rye is Salinger's only novel and also his most notable work. The novel is the culmination of themes that appeared throughout a number of Salinger's short stories, however, some of which form the basis of individual chapters in The Catcher in the Rye. The Caulfield family is the subject of two of Salinger's major stories, "This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise" and "I'm Crazy" as well as a number of unpublished works. The first of these stories, "This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise," is narrated by Vincent Caulfield, who learns that his brother is missing from Pentey Preparatory School (changed to Pencey in the novel). Vincent serves as the basis for D.B. Caulfield, Holden's older brother in the novel, and is the protagonist in a number of stories by Salinger. In "An Ocean Full of Bowling Balls," Vincent recalls his relationship with Kenneth, his deceased younger brother (the obvious basis for Allie). This unpublished story also details how Kenneth became angry when an adult calls Holden crazy and how Holden complains about hypocritical adults at his summer camp. Additional stories fill in detail left out of The Catcher in the Rye. "The Last and Best of the Peter Pans," narrated by Vincent Caulfield, focuses on a conversation between Vincent and his actress mother, Mary Moriarty, concerning a questionnaire from the draft board that she had hidden from Vincent. This conversation ends with a reference to her wanting to keep a child from going over a cliff, an idea that Holden references in The Catcher in the Rye when he discusses his ideal situation with Phoebe. In another story, "Last Day of the Last Furlough," Vincent and ?Babe' Gladwaller prepare to go off to war. However, in these series of short stories Salinger has Vincent Caulfield die during World War II; "The Stranger" concerns ?Babe' Gladwaller's attempt to tell Vincent's girlfriend how he died. The other major short story concerning the Caulfield family is "I'm Crazy," the story which forms the basis for the first two chapters of The Catcher in the Rye as well as the chapter in which Holden goes home to see Phoebe. In this story, however, Holden expresses greater regret for his expulsion from ?Pentey,' even lamenting that he will never again play games of football on Saturday evenings with his friends from Pentey. The chapter in which Holden tries to convince Sally to run away with him to New England is the basis for yet another short story, "Slight Rebellion Off Madison." The basis of The Catcher in the Rye as a series of unrelated short stories as well as Salinger's affection for that form explains the pacing and relative lack of narrative continuity in the novel. No setting nor character recurs for more than one or two consecutive chapters. The first chapters of the novel, which are all set at Pencey, are the only ones that sustain the same characters and setting for an extended period. Holden, as narrator, is the only character who recurs throughout the entire story, as characters such as Sally Hayes and Mr. Antolini appear only in one chapter and then basically disappear. Furthermore, since Salinger reiterates thematic elements throughout the novel (in practically every chapter Holden complains about ?phonies'), many of the chapters can essentially stand as short stories in themselves.
ClassicNote on The Catcher in the Rye
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