Pertaining to what you said about a teenage boy reading TCITR, I agree. Although I am a girl, I feel at times I can identify with Holden in how he longs for Allie, for a "far-away" love and how he is quite cynnical. I am a high school student, and I first read TCITR last year. I immdiately saw connections between Holden and myself, however I feel that there is at least one aspect of any character in any writing that people can relate to in one way or another. Upon reading the book the second time, I again made connections with the characters in other fashions such as Taoism. I have always been quite interested in Taoist philosophies (one good book to read is _The Tao of Pooh_~it is analyzing the Taoist philosophies of Winnie the Pooh), and I would like to know people's perspectives of TCITR and Taoism. ******************************************************************* Sarah cinnimon@vvm.com http://members.tripod.com/~cinnimon4 ---------- I've been on this list for quite sometime really and I've been both amazed and disgusted at what can be found in the works of J.D. Salinger. By this I mean that although Buddhism and Taoist musing may be very prevalant in Salinger's stories, this "deeper meaning" may lead to certain prententious understandings of his works. I think this completey misinterprets, in a way, the real idea behind J.D. Salinger. J.D. Salinger always left his stories very open ended and up for interpretation. The different meanings and connections a person can make with a single story are endless. That's what I think the beauty of the stories are, the many ways they can be. The questions left over by his works that can ponder in the heads of the reader for days, if not a lifetime. When we as critical readers, start to breakdown and deconstruct Salinger's work we can find hidden messages not visible to the naive reader. Does this mean that these underlying, obscure messages are what the purpose of Salinger's works are supposed to convey, and they are only supposed to be understood by the highly intellectual? I disagree with this idea because I believe that interpretation is the point, not one interpretation but the many as a whole. We've spent much of our time on the is list discussing these "deeper meanings" of Salinger's works which, although quite fascinating, can make us lose touch with what really makes Salinger's works special. Personally, I am far more fascinated with the teenage perspective of Salinger's works, especially The Catcher in the Rye. When a teenage boy, for expample, reads this novel he may not realize the Taoist calling in the book but instead just simply relates with Holden's both acute sense of the world around him, and the disillionment that has become of it. I think the way the "naive reader" relates to Salinger's works is extremely interesting. I think Salinger himself would agree with me and that's why he chose to right the Catcher in the Rye throught the eyes of a teenage madman philosopher. But then again, maybe I'm wrong ( I realize I've probably contadicted many statements a million times over but I hope you get the point). Punk rock. Matt