El guardián entre el centeno

Paperback, 228 pages

Published Oct. 4, 1978 by Alianza Editorial.

ISBN:
978-84-206-3409-8
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(18 reviews)

Story of Holden Caufield with his idiosyncrasies, penetrating insight, confusion, sensitivity and negativism. Holden, knowing he is to be expelled from school, decides to leave early. He spends three days in New York City and tells the story of what he did and suffered there.

47 editions

Holden no quiere que crezcas. Yo tampoco.

Lo abrí por curiosidad. El guardián entre el centeno . Todo el mundo hablaba de él. “Un clásico”, decían. Lo que no esperaba era que Holden Caulfield —con su voz rota, sarcástica, brutalmente honesta— me atrapara como un amigo perdido.

No hay tramas épicas. No hay giros espectaculares. Hay un chico de 16 años que huye de todo: del colegio, de sus padres, de la tristeza. Sobre todo, de la hipocresía del mundo adulto. Y mientras lo seguía por las calles de Nueva York, me sentí como si caminara con él. Porque Holden no narra una historia. Te confiesa su vida.

Su rabia me conmovió. Su ternura con su hermana Phoebe me desarmó. Y sus pensamientos sobre la muerte, el amor y el sentirse fuera de lugar… eso me golpeó de lleno.

¿Quién no se ha sentido un poco perdido, un poco fuera del mapa? ¿Quién no ha querido proteger …

Review of 'The Catcher in the Rye' on 'Storygraph'

Read this due to its historical impact in the formation of YA literature. I enjoyed it, felt it accurately depicts the angst of adolescence and I likely would have related to it if I had read it as a kid. It was very dated though, one thing I highly disliked and got caught off guard was <spoiler>just how casually homophobic the book is and how that at times plays into the plot. How far we've come, huh!</spoiler>

Review of 'The Catcher in the Rye' on 'Goodreads'

Another book that you see something different each time. I read this as a youth and adopted some of the character's contempt for fitting in and then in the 90s, when I went on a literary beatnik immersion, I understood the humanizing aspects, how Holden just wants to protect his sister and the other children, how his angst springs from genuine concern rather than a willful nature alone.

This time I admired the writing, especially the voice: all the quite this and quite that, interspersed with goddam this and goodam that. When he scrubs obscenities from the wall of the elementary school and museum, the irony is breathtaking.

I love this book. I love its crudity and the visceral impact of the words. It's not beautiful prose, not at all. Like the protagonist the prose itself has contempt for society's approval. Beneath it all, though, is a heartfelt message about …

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Subjects

  • Spanish: Adult Fiction
  • Salinger, J. D. - Prose & Criticism
  • Fiction
  • Fiction - General
  • General