| In J.D. Salinger’s novel titled “The Catcher In the Rye” (1951), the reader can become witness to the life, pscychology and moods of one central male character or the protaganist named Holden Caulfield through the complexity of human behavior, psychology and personality. Holden is a young man at the age of sixteen who cannot be named as a hero but as a boy who has difficulties and problems in his maturation process. These drawbacks reflect themselves in the novel through his attitudes, way of speaking, approaching the other people in his environment and his points of view about life itself. |