Catcher In The Rye Ending

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“Don’t ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start missing everybody,” (Salinger 234). The ending of The Catcher in the Rye takes place during the last couple hours of Holden’s story that we know. He has now decided that he’s going to run away west, and he feels the need to tell his little sister, Phoebe, what he’s doing. After dropping off a note for her at her school, Holden meets up with Phoebe at the museum and he tells her the news, although she is not happy with it at all, and begins to ignore him during their entire walk through the Central Park Zoo. Eventually, Phoebe forgives him, and we learn that Holden did go home after this occurred, but we do not know what happened after that. In the beginning of Eleanor & Park, we are introduced …show more content…

While reading the last 40 or so pages of this book, I found some parts that I enjoyed, and some parts that I didn’t like as much. I really liked the fact that Holden goes out of his way to say goodbye to Phoebe. He does this because he has come to terms that he is going to alienate himself from his family and run away again. I thought that it was so sweet that Holden thought of his sister the way he did. It was on top of his list of thing’s to do before he ran away for the last time. In my opinion, I don’t think that Holden would have been able to live with himself if he never said goodbye to his little sister, especially with the death of his little brother, Allie, a few years before. One aspect of the ending of this book was the fact that Holden never told us anything specific about things that happened to him after he went home one last time. He says that he got sick and is going to another school next year, but that’s all that we are left with. He’s so vague about this part in his history. The reader never gets to learn where Holden left to, if he even left at all, because he thought it would bore the reader. He says, “That’s all I’m going to tell about. I could probably tell you what I did after I went home… but I don’t feel like it. I really don’t. That stuff doesn’t interest me too much right now” (Salinger 234). Overall, it makes me extremely happy that Holden went to visit Phoebe before he left, but it …show more content…

From what I can get from the reading, Park seems to be musing over Eleanor in his classes, constantly thinking about her and how he regrets his poor choice of words when they first met, which were “Sit down… Jesus f*ck just sit down” (Rowell 9). Another reason I think these events may happen in the future is the fact that Park, at first, is just casually letting Eleanor read his comic books from across the room, but once he starts to get more comfortable with the fact of that happening, he lets her read it sitting right next to him on the bus. Park would normally have a new comic book every time he got on the bus, but since the two never finished the first comic book that they were reading on the way to school, he did not read ahead, and finished it with her on the bus ride home from school. One last reason I have this prediction is that the very first page of the book talks about how Park lost Eleanor, and will never be getting her back. Overall, there is plenty of evidence to support my prediction, and I hope that it comes

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