Catcher in the Rye book cover

Lone Star College-Kingwood Library

Assignment Guide for

J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye (1951)


This guide will help you find information for your research assignment in both books and in electronic resources. For students at Lone Star College-Kingwood, there may be materials on reserve at the Circulation Desk. Ask a librarian for assistance.

FINDING BOOKS IN THE CATALOG

The best way to find books about Salinger's work is to search the library catalog.  Enter Salinger, or Catcher in the Rye in the Keywords Anywhere search box.   Remember you can electronically request books from other libraries in the Lone Star College System.  Ask a Librarian if you need help with the catalog.

Librarian Talk . . .About Books!

    Apply online for a library card. Use your card to:

    1) Place a Hold on a book and have it sent to the library closest to you
    2) Access journal and reference databases from home, and
    3) Access e-Books from NetLibrary.

  • The catalog is online.
  • Online or e-Books are available at  NetLibrary.  Use your library card to log in.
    More about...Finding Books (31 sec.)

CRITICISM IN REFERENCE BOOKS

The Reference Area is the place to begin your research. Use some of the books listed below to get in touch with what literary people are saying about the novel.  

Many of the following print materials are also available in electronic format in the Literature Resource Center or the Gale Literary Databases. Students can access these databases from off campus by logging in with the barcode number on the back of their student ID or library card.


BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

J(Jerome) D(David) Salinger was born Jan. 1, 1919, in New York City, the son of a Jewish father and an Irish mother.  In 1932, his family, after living in several different apartments in fashionable upper Manhattan, moved to a building located at the corner of Park Avenue and East Ninety-First Street.  It was in this section of New York that Salinger was to locate the apartment of the Caulfields in The Catcher in the Rye.  In 1940, he published his first story and continued providing stories for such magazines as Colliers and The New Yorker throughout the 40's.  In 1942, he was drafted into the army and took part in the D-Day landing and five subsequent campaigns in World War II.  In 1945, Salinger's first marriage to a French woman he met while hospitalized for a nervous condition ended in divorce.  He was married for a second time from 1955 to 1967 to Claire Douglas  with whom he had two children.  From 1940 to 1953, he published thirteen short stories and one novel, The Catcher in the Rye (1951).  There were two volumes of pirated short stories in the 1970's, but he personally published his last work in 1963.  He now lives in Cornish, New Hampshire where he moved in 1953.  There he zealously guards his privacy and continues to write but not to publish.  Though his  literary output has been sparse, he is considered one of the most influential authors of the twentieth century.  The Catcher in the Rye  has remained a novel taught in classrooms across the country despite its distinction of  being one of the most censored books of the last fifty years.

Sources for more biographical information include:

  • REF PN41 .D5, vols. 2 and 173 - Dictionary of Literary Biography - DLB is a multi-volume work which provides detailed biographical sketches of the authors' literary writings as well as general critical commentary.
  • REF PS129 .A55, vol 3 - American Writers  - This set of books provides information about the lives, careers, and works of American writers. 

CHARACTERS | THEMES | SETTING

Setting: The Catcher in the Rye takes place shortly after WWII, during the Christmas season in New York City, Agerstown, Pennsylvania, and a sanatorium.


Characters:

Holden Caulfield- a recently suspended sixteen-year old preparatory school student
Phoebe Caulfield - Holden's ten-year old sister
Mr. Antolini - Holden's favorite teacher
Sally Hayes - a slightly older friend of Holden who is his date
Robert Ackley - a resident in Holden's dorm at Pencey
Ward Stradlater - Holden's roommate at Pencey


Themes to Consider:

  • Suicide 
  • Adolescent Behavior 
  • Cynicism 
  • Idealism 
  • Censorship 
  • Brother-Sister Relations 
  • Pressure to Conform 
  • Social Change 
  • Social Class 
  • Use of First Person Narrator 
  • Influence of Buddhism
  • Antiheroes   

Character Information in Books

Note:  most of the books listed throughout this page will have information about the characters in the book.
  • REF PS374 .C43 M35 - Major Characters in American Fiction - Long-ish entries on the most important characters.
  • PN56.4 .H37 - Characters in 20th-Century Literature - Brief information on the characters in this book under the entry on Salinger.
  • PS3537.A426 C328 -  Holden Caufield - from the series on Major Literary Characters.  This book is also available in NetLibrary, a database of full text books available online.  Create a Free Account in order to save favorite book titles or personal notes on books you read.
    Learn to search NetLibrary for literary criticism!
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BACKGROUND READING

The following books will help you find additional information.  Use them and find others on your own that are appropriate for your topic.  Once you find a book on your subject, browse through the Reference and Circulating shelves nearby to find other books on the topic.

FINDING JOURNAL ARTICLES

Librarian Talk . . . About Finding Journal and Newspaper Articles!

Electronic databases are purchased by the libraries for your research use. To find articles in newspapers and journals, letters, reference books, illustrations, photographs and more, use your updated library card to login to the following databases. If you find an interesting article that is not full-text, please give the correct bibliographic information to our Reference Librarians and they will see that you get the article. They will need full bibliographic information - and your name and address. Send your phone number as well, so they can contact you if they need to. There is some overlap of articles in the following databases. However, we encourage you to use more than one. All are excellent sources for this topic. 

HINT: For a full list of article databases, go to http://kclibrary.lonestar.edu/db-alpha.html and use your library card for login.
More about searching databases (25 sec.)

Literature Resource Center
Scholarly journal articles, many full text.  Also articles in reference books.  The best search to find criticle articles is the title search.  Type in Catcher in the Rye and select "all words entered" before clicking the Search button.  This search will also find literary criticism in the MLA International Bibliography, the oldest and most authorative index to scholarly literary journals.  Many of the scholarly journal articles or critical essays in the MLA index are not full text, but they can be found in other databases, in journals in the library, or on microfiche in the library.  Ask the Reference Librarians if you need help with the microfiche reader/printer.

JSTOR Arts & Sciences

Search and browse the complete back issues for over 117 scholarly, including many journals in literature.

Proquest Research Library  

This full-text multi-discipline database includes articles on literature.  Limit your search to Scholarly Journals, including Peer reviewed.  A suggested search is Catcher and Salinger. 
Academic Search Complete  
This is another full-text multi-discipline database from Ebsco.  Limit your search to Scholarly (Peer Reviewed) Journals.
Note:  To access these databases from off campus, students may login with the barcode number from their library card using the links above.

INTERNET SITES

Librarian Talk . . . About the Internet!

The Internet will be a wonderful source of original documents. Browse the sites we have suggested below. Remember, you do want to find reputable sites. Look at:

  1. Accuracy - The information should be researched and show proof that it has been.
  2. Source - Who wrote the information? Look at the domain.  .edu .gov. org .net are valid research sources.
  3. Authority - What are the author's credentials?  (Don't quote from another college freshman's paper.)
  4. Coverage - Does the page have the information you need for your research?
  5. Objectivity - If a work is biased, use it - just make sure your professor knows YOU know. And offer both sides of issues, where applicable.
More about finding internet sources (25 sec.)
J. D. Salinger  | Google's annotated list of Catcher sites in order of popularity

Catcher in the Rye | a study guide from homework-online.com. Includes summary and explanations, character analysis, and a discussion of themes, symbols, and motifs.

A Catcher in the Rye  Photo Tour   |  Links to the geographic places mentioned in the novel

New York Times Review  |  Book review by Nash K. Burger published July 16, 1951.

Aw, the World's a Crumby Place | another NYT book review, this one by James Stern published July 15, 1951.

Decades 1950 |  A web page on American culture in the 1950's

Banned And/Or Challenged Books from a List of the Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century |  The American Library Association marks 42 titles from this list as having  been the target of ban attempts.  The Catcher in the Rye is so marked.


GETTING HELP FOR YOUR ASSIGNMENT

Citing Sources Using the Library MLA Style Guide | Kingwood College library guide. Examples of both paper and electronic citations.

Learning Center  |  Offers tutoring services for Lone Star College-Kingwood students in most subjects as well as other services.


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Lone Star College-Kingwood Library