How does Holden feel about war? All eyes are fixed upon him as he stands in the downpour. He is no longer speaking only for himself—he is reaching out to all of us.As army sergeant J. D. Salinger hit the beach on D-day, drank with Hemingway in newly liberated Paris, and marched into concentration camps, the hero of Sign up for our essential daily brief and never miss a story. “The Magic Foxhole” is angry, verging on the subversive.The story opens days after D-day on a slow-moving convoy. A man who believed he held the answer to life’s great questions suddenly discovers that he doesn’t—just when he needs an answer most. Glancing over, the soldiers caught sight of Salinger typing away under a table.The pain of loss dominates Salinger’s seventh Caulfield story, “This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise,” which was probably written around this very time. Holden also uses his lies to keep himself out of the wrong like after he and Stradlater got into their quarrel. George and Sally kept talking about people they knew throughout the rest of the play until Holden and Sally got to there cab. As an intelligence officer, Salinger was also designated to identify Nazi collaborators among the French. Vincent does not respond. and Phoebe?Holden was thinking that Sir Lawrence Olivier who played in Hamlet was not as good as D.B. D.B. He meets a girl on a bus then they start talking about Charles Dickens and they fall in love right away. Holden couldn't stand going to war because you would have to stay in the army too long and he would go crazy if he had to be with a bunch of guys like Ackley. Nearly half of the 2,517 casualties suffered by the 12th Infantry in Hürtgen were due to the elements. Holden then started laughing at her and got his shoes and left.What are Holden's theories on girls' opinions of boys?Holden's theories of girls opinions on boys are that if a girl likes a boy no matter how big a bastard he is, they will say he has an inferiority complex and if they don't like him, no matter how nice a guy he is or how big an inferiority complex he has, they say he is conceited.Holden plans to meet Carl Luce who Holden knew from Whooton school.Why is Holden repulsed by his afternoon at Radio City Music Hall?Holden was repulsed at Radio City music hall by the actors carrying crucifixes all over the stage which was supposed to be religious. He would rather, he says, be shot by a firing squad or sit on top of an atom bomb. He was too much like a general and not a sad screwed up guy. Holden would want to be in front of a firing squad. It took the 12th Infantry three hours to cross the marsh. Then Holden helps tighten her skates.Describe Holden's memory and opinions about the Museum of Natural HistoryHolden remembers his teacher Mrs. Aigletinger taking them to the museum nearly every Saturday.


He sees war as a product of the unnecessary phoniness and superficiality of the adult world.There are numerous online resources to help you with The Catcher in the Rye, most of which analyze the story, discuss themes and symbolism and other literary devices, and give character sketches. Holden talks about a movie he watched about an English guy named Alec and the man loses his memory in a hospital after being in a war. Rather, he found him to be gentle and well grounded: overall, a “really good guy.” Salinger tended to separate Hemingway’s professional persona from his personal one. lying on his bed and staring at the ceiling really reminds us that, for all that WWII was painted as such a noble war, it was still a way—with brutal effects on the people actually fighting it.We have to ask: between D.B., Allie, and Phoebe, is Holden’s entire family full of precociously wise children? That last question he had answered with an unambiguous “yes.” He very much had the future Holden Caulfield novel in mind when he gave this answer, explaining to Hemingway that he was afraid of the impact a psychological discharge might have on how the book’s author would be perceived.Some of the irony and vernacular of Holden Caulfield comes through in this letter. After the liberation of Paris, General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s chief of staff declared that “militarily, the war is over.” Salinger’s division would have the honor of being the first to enter Germany. Holden thinks that if there is a war, he is glad that the atomic bomb has been invented, for he would volunteer to sit right on top of it. Years later, Salinger’s counter-intelligence colleagues would remember him as constantly stealing away to write. Probably because I’m short on it myself.”As time went on, Salinger derived great personal strength from his relationship with Hemingway, and knew him by his nickname, “Papa.” The warmth did not necessarily transfer to Hemingway’s writing—at least not if one goes by Holden Caulfield’s later condemnation of The Allied invasion of Normandy, June 6, 1944. But there is a problem. “You could live a lifetime,” he once told his daughter, “and never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose.”Salinger’s wartime experiences eventually brought on a deep depression.