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Christian De Matteo
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Upon Rereading The Catcher in the Rye
by
Christian De Matteo F
While rewatching Pleasantville, a film I have much
love for, on my last vacation, I reached the great scene when
Tobey Maguire and Jeff Daniels’s characters paint the mural on
the jailhouse wall, by way of protest.
As the camera panned across the wall, I read the titles
of the books they had chosen to represent artistic and personal
freedom.
The Catcher in the Rye was one of those books.
Being as avid a reader as I am a film buff, I was at that
moment in the middle of two books (The Seven Daughters of Eve
by Byron Sykes and Sidney Lumet’s Making Movies) and
dying to start another (American Gods by Neil Gaiman).
And yet, somehow, out of the three books featured on that
wall mural, Catcher hit me hard, so hard that when the
credits rolled on the film, I immediately pulled a copy off the
bookshelf and began reading.
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The time was 2:45 AM.
Within two days I had the book finished, no small feat
considering my constant need to put it down and think.
I rarely reread books, mostly because there are so many
others I’ve yet to get to for the first time, and I’d read Catcher
when I was a junior in high school.
I am now 25 and can’t imagine how I got anything out of
it back then.
The book is absolute brilliance, a tale of loss,
immaturity, existential angst and the every day disgust with
humanity that I too have a hard time dealing with.
The Catcher in the Rye also wonderfully and
perversely celebrates life and humanity, with just the same
opposing emotions I too fight with.
Basically, the book about this high school student was
more about me now, than about the high school me who read it.
In the space of a few short days in the life of Holden,
our guide and antihero, more philosophical issues are covered
than in some philosophy books I’ve read.
It is clear from page one, that Holden is not being
presented as the way we ought to be— far from it, he doesn’t
want to be the way he is— but as the way we could be and, in
some case, are. What
Holden does is personify the journey, so many thinking humans
are always on.
Now, do not misunderstand this.
Catcher is far from some new age, self-help book
with all the answers for a better life.
No, the novel is well aware of the negativity that we
can’t change in the world and how limited we truly are.
Never does Salinger pretend to have the answers, nor does
one get the feeling he would particularly care to give them, if
he did. Instead, he
tells a tale about a very particular character, with very
particular thoughts, loves, hates and confusions, that somehow
we can easily relate to our own lives and thoughts, loves, hates
and confusions. He
tells the tale of a human, a highly individualized Everyman
(what a concept!), a child for adults to relate to, and studies
the concept of being alive through this colorful cipher
of a character.
Holden’s uncomfortable
adolescence manages to encapsulate so many of the great
questions and frustrations of humans from the beginning of time.
How does one deal with the “phoniness” of the world,
the “two-facedness” or the “stupidity” of those who seem
to walk through the world without thinking, losing themselves in
celebrities and fleeting good times?
How can you walk around surrounded by the evil that man
can commit? How
does one deal with not being able to save everyone, and being
often not even able to save oneself?
Copyright
© 2002 by Christian De Matteo, all rights reserved |
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Salinger manages to capture the essence of the human
condition by using those people most human: the teenage
boy searching for meaning; the grown teacher with a lot of
the answers for others, but obviously still missing a lot
for himself; and the little girl, living through
unconditional love and spunk.
Ultimately
dealing with what it means to be alive and be with others,
Salinger’s book floored me, picked me up to the levels
of revelation and dropped me back to the realities of my
condition, personally and universally.
I was simultaneously frightened by how much of
myself I saw in Holden, and comforted by it as well.
More than anything I was humbled and enlightened by
what I saw of myself in Holden, taking on the lessons he
receives personally.
Obviously, not every aspect
of Holden was applicable to me.
Holden is too real and fleshed out of a character
for that. When
Holden goes for his pivotal conversation with his old
teacher, Mr. Antonini, however, I did feel every word,
sentence and thought that was directed to Holden as though
it were directed to me, so powerful and brilliant was the
writing. I
literally had no other option but to put the book down and
sit, let Mr. Antonini’s words wash over me and realize
that, whatever else he was, he was right.
When
discussing this recently with a professor of mine from my
undergrad, she told me she rereads The Catcher in the
Rye every ten years or so, and gets something
different out of it every time.
I now understand this.
J.D. Salinger’s great work spoke to me now, in
this exact phase of my life, so specifically that I
wondered if the book wasn’t put back in my hands by
divine province. I truly feel that I was meant to reread it at exactly this
juncture of my life. |
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I only wish
I could fast forward and reread it again in ten years now,
just to see what else I will find in it then.
But that
would be silly, wouldn’t it?
I’m sure
I’ll get those new insights precisely when I need them.
I’ve heard
it said that J.D. Salinger wasn’t prolific at all.
He in fact, suggests that in his opening to Franny
and Zooey, but I disagree.
With the single work of The Catcher in the Rye,
Salinger will be producing for eternity. |
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Copyright
© 2002 by Christian De Matteo, all rights reserved |
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