Catcher In the Rye: The Quest
In many novels in J.D. Salinger's library of books, there is a recurring
theme of the loss of innocence of children, the falling and the confusions of
childhood, and many other ideas that apply to the ideas of adolescence and the
life of the average teenager growing up. Many of his themes occur in a short
period of time in a child's life that affects him/her in a very profound and
significant way.
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h realizations in theses few days of
his life give him a new perspective in his once secure world. He realizes that
caring, not catching, is needed in the preservation of innocence. Catching some
children in the rye merely saves a select number of individuals, for a little
period of time. It is Holden's realization that children are destined to fall
from innocence and it is futile for him to try to change it otherwise.
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