The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
In The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Holden Caulfield is constantly depressed and down with his life. He failed out of four schools and even when out of school he isnāt very successful. Heās considered a dropout, a failure, a madman. Along with him is societyās āfink.ā In āThe Right to Failā by William Zinsser, the everyday ādropoutā is looked at. The dropout, or āfinkā, fails but later regains his life. By being pessimistic, Holden is more likely to see failure as a bad thing while the āfinkā sees failure as a step in success.
Holden Caulfield and the āfinkā both experience failure. The finkās failure might just be a staircase in success. The fink might need to discover himself and when he does, he will be on his way to achieving better things in life. In āThe Right to Failā Zinsser says, āFor the young, dropping out is often a way of dropping inā (Zinsser 2). For Holden, it takes a much longer time to deal with failure. He has to go through many things first. He has to deal with failing out of school, having his brother die, and all the normal teenage problems including sex, girls, and general life. Holden never really tried throughout his life. In The Catcher in the Rye he says, āThey kicked me outā¦I was flunking four subjects and not applying myself at allā (Salinger 4). Holden gave up in showing effort. That led to another failure and then another, making a chain. The fink goes against society, but in the end finds his way, whereas Holden just soaks in his problems, causing a mental drama to himself. The fink can be a person of any age encountering a certain failure. However, Holden is just a teenager dealing with many failures. It is much harder for him to go through life because he is still just growing up. Holden puts in no effort to do something, while at first the fink might not do anything, but later will try to improve his or her life. Zinsser states, āI want to put in a good word for the finkā¦he has a good chance of becoming our national idleā¦a man with a mind of his ownā (Zinsser 4). Through incomplete stages in life, the fink later succeeds. The fink goes against society but still sticks with it in the end. Holden, on the other hand, completely lives his own life separate from those around him.
In āThe Right to Failā the author always looks to the good side of failure. He says, āIāve learned a great deal from my failuresā¦it is the only way to growā (Zinsser 10-11). He is very optimistic. The fink sees failure as a chance to learn more about him or herself. The fink uses failure in a way that will later be beneficial. On the other hand, Holden is quite pessimistic. He doesnāt look to the better sides of his failure. He is always depressed. Holden says things like āIt was too depressing,ā (Salinger 80) āThat killed me,ā (127) and āIt made me even more depressed when she said thatā (169). People who are happy donāt say things like that all the time. Holden