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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Speak Shenzhen -> 
‘The Catcher in the Rye’
    2022-01-20  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

James Baquet

A book read by many American high school students is J.D. Salinger’s 1951 novel “The Catcher in the Rye.” Though dealing with complex issues of adolescence, it has found a spot on many recent adult readers’ surveys.

Holden Caulfield is the prototypical “troubled teen.” Recently expelled mid-year from a private school for failing all of his classes except English, he catches a train to New York. He plans to avoid going home until a few days later, when his parents would receive notification of his expulsion. The rest of the book is about his adventures in the city on his own during those few days.

Just looking for a decent conversation, he’s disappointed by a taxi driver, some tourists, and a prostitute named Sunny who visited his room (which leads to being beat up by her pimp).

Still looking for someone to talk to, he annoys a few of his old friends before going to visit his 10-year-old sister Phoebe while his parents are out. She figures out that he has been expelled and scolds him for not caring about anything important. He counters by saying he has a fantasy of saving children from falling off a cliff in a field of rye: he has misunderstood an old song called “Comin’ Thro’ the Rye.”

He leaves before his parents come home and visits an old English teacher, Mr. Antolini, who worries about his future. When the teacher allows him to stay the night, Holden wakes feeling uncomfortable and leaves, then spends the night in the waiting room of a huge train station. After wandering the city streets throughout the morning, he decides the best thing to do is to run away and go “out west.”

He meets Phoebe to say goodbye, and she says she wants to go with him. He says no, which upsets her, but then he takes her to the zoo, where he becomes happy watching her try to grab the brass ring while riding the carousel.

The story ends with Holden alluding to an encounter with his parents, and the news that he will attend another school in September — but other than his optimism about Phoebe, nothing has really changed, in contrast to most stories recommended to young adults.

Vocabulary:

Which word above means:

1. a kind of grain, like wheat or barley

2. criminal who manages a prostitute

3. merry-go-round, a kind of ride with wooden horses and other animals

4. positive outlook

5. a classic example of something

6. imaginary story

7. argues against something

8. kicked out

9. referring without saying directly

10. a person who has sex for money

ANSWERS: 1. rye 2. pimp 3. carousel 4. optimism 5. prototypical 6. fantasy 7. counters 8. expelled 9. alluding 10. prostitute

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