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PrismaticWonder t1_ja4hedm wrote

The first sentence of the novel makes it clear that he is basically talking to a therapist.

From this fact, we learn that there are 2 Holdens in the book: 1 who is younger and is the person who is did the actions (leaving school, going to NYC, etc.), and 1 who is a year older who is narrating the novel to the therapist, which is a narration of the events in his life from a year prior. And thus he is an unreliable narrator.

So it’s fascinating that we are watching the events of Holden from the perspective and diction of an older, post-consciousness-shift Holden, which we don’t see/hear happen until toward the end of the novel.

I didn’t catch that so much when I read the novel for high school, but when I picked it up again after college, it clicked for me and I loved the writing style/choices that Salinger managed to pull off.

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Mariposa510 t1_ja88gjc wrote

I read this book as a teenager purely because i wanted to after reading the first page. I have since reread parts of it periodically numerous times over the course of 40 years. It still kills me every time.

All this talk about an unreliable narrator or whatever…. Who cares? We’re not in high school English class here.

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