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The Catcher In The Rye Essay

 

            In The Catcher In The Rye Holden Caulfield lives a rather comfortable lifestyle. In the story, Holden is a teenage boy with many problems. He gets kicked out of yet another prep school and while trying to figure out what to do with his life he looses it. His younger brother, Allie, has died and Holden has been spiraling down since. Overall The Catcher In The Rye is a raw written book that holds back nothing. His father is a lawyer, so his family is pretty well off. He and his family are respectable members of New York's high society. They have money and social status, all things that make them apart of New York's high society. His family is blue-blooded A-list people. Holden is growing up in a life that many people would consider privileged. The only thing is that Holden doesn't really care for things like money, distinguished prep schools, and New York City life he just wants love and happiness. Social status means nothing to Holden because none of it provides the love and happiness that he is looking for.
             Holden has money but all that it buys him is pointless and meaningless pleasures that bring no happiness and least of all love. In New York Holden pays for a hooker to come up to his room. Holden thinks that maybe sleeping with the hooker will give him some satisfaction and give him a sense of love. What Holden later comes to understand is that he doesn't wants to have meaningless sex with some girl who is just as lost and confused as he is. In New York Holden goes to the Wicker Bar and gets completely wasted. At that point Holden is lonely and thinks that he has lucked out on any happiness. He tries to escape and find happiness in alcohol, but all it does is get him drunk and even more confused than before. The problem with Holden is that he doesn't know what he wants or what he wants to do to satisfy his needs, he just knows that he can't find either in meaningless sex or drinking binges.


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