Wednesday 12 August 2015

"...the first thing you'll most likely need to know is the place I was conceived and what my lousy youth was similar to, and how my guardians were possessed and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield sort of poo, yet I don't have a craving for going into it, on the off chance that you need to know reality. In any case, that stuff exhausts me, and in the second place, my guardians would have around two hemorrhages each on the off chance that I informed anything really individual regarding them."

Since his presentation in 1951 as The Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield has been synonymous with "critical immature." Holden portrays the account of two or three days in his sixteen-year-old life, soon after he's been removed from private school, in a slang that sounds tense even today and keeps this novel on banned book records. His consistent wry perceptions about what he experiences, from instructors to fakes (the two obviously are not totally unrelated) catch the embodiment of the everlasting adolescent experience of distance.

Download Now

0 comments:

Post a Comment