Der Fänger im Roggen

Roman

Paperback, 270 pages

German language

Published Aug. 13, 1962 by k & w.

ISBN:
978-3-462-01539-3
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
2223862

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(8 reviews)

...Falls Sie wirklich meine Geschichte hören wollen, so möchten Sie wahrscheinlich vor allem wissen, wo ich geboren wurde und wie ich meine verflixte Kindheit verbrachte und was meine Eltern taten, be-vor sie mit mir beschäftigt waren, und was es sonst noch an David-Copperfield-Zeug zu erzählen gäbe, aber ich habe keine Lust, das alles zu erzählen. Erstens langweilt mich das alles, und zweitens bekämen meine Eltern pro Nase je zwei Schlaganfälle, wenn ich so persönliche Auskünfte über sie geben würde. Sie sind in der Hinsicht sehr emp-findlich, besonders mein Vater. Sie sind sehr nette Leute und so - ich sage nichts gegen sie -, aber höllisch empfindlich. Außerdem will ich nicht meine ganze verfluchte Autobiographie oder etwas Ähnliches schreibe. Ich will nur die verrückten Sachen erzählen, die sich letzte Weihnachten abspielten, bevor ich vollkommen zusammenklappte und hierher gebracht wurde, um mich zu erholen... --back cover

48 editions

Review of 'The Catcher in the Rye' on 'Goodreads'

This review is crossposted from my blog here: daariga.wordpress.com/2017/02/19/the-catcher-in-the-rye/

I
had heard so much about The Catcher in the Rye being a classic that I had imagined it as an American version of a Dickens novel. Within the few opening lines, I was pleasantly surprised to discover that it was a story narrated by a teenager living in post-WW2 1950s USA! J. D. Salinger’s hero is a certain Holden Caulfield, a rich kid who has just been been kicked out for the umpteenth time from yet another private school. Other than English literature, he has no interest in any other school subject, so flunks causing schools to keep dropping him. His narration in the novel covers a few days of his life before Christmas that year in intimate detail as he struggles to find a direction in his rudderless life.

Holden is the stereotypical angsty US teenager whom …

Review of 'The Catcher in the Rye' on 'Goodreads'

Meh. I don't see what the fuss is all about. Maybe the book was controversial in 1950's when it was released, but now it just doesn't seem to hold any gravitas. Holden Caufield seems to hate everyone, feels he's better than everyone else and they're all out to get him. It rambles for the whole book, reads like a self-absorbed self-righteous writing you might find online. The style probably was unique in a repressed era which people didn't share their every thought, but now with social media and everyone sharing everything it just comes across as shallow.

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