Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger, mentions different methods of wanting to kill himself throughout the novel, but he never follows through with any of them. Some methods he considers include jumping out of a window or off a cliff, shooting himself, drowning, or jumping out of a cab if he'll "meet a cliff on the other side." His thoughts on suicide stem from his feelings of alienation, despair, and a desire to escape the pressures and phoniness of the adult world.
a suicide man
The significance is that Holden himself is a phony, yet he does not realize it.
He did not want to be humiliated in Rome after defeat.
He thought she was dead.
he did kill himself because no one understood him he had hung him self because he felt cold inside didn't want anything to wit that life
Because he was driven to despair by poverty, he killed himself by drinking arsenic at the age of 17.
Mr. Spencer advises Holden to apply himself more diligently to his studies and to think about his future. Holden becomes defensive and dismissive, feeling misunderstood and disconnected from Mr. Spencer's perspective.
yes with Romans help
Bella tryed to kill herself because she thought if she would keep trying Edward would come back to Forks
The cast of Being Sam Holden - 2012 includes: Ian Le Bruce as (Himself)
he was going to kill himself but he changed his mind.
why did steve scruugs kill himself