In Chapter 9 of J.D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye," Holden considers calling Jane Gallagher, Carl Luce, and Sally Hayes. He ultimately decides not to call any of them.
she stays completely still- doesn't move and won't even talk. Chapter 23 i think
Holden met two nuns at the little sandwich bar. They discussed Romeo and Juliet, and the nuns explained their perspective on the characters and the play. The conversation with the nuns made Holden think about faith and whether it was something he needed in his life.
Stradlater punched Holden because Holden was hitting him as well. kept calling Stradlater a moron even though he warned Holden to stop many times. ( i also think its a pet peeve or something because in the book, it said "All morons hate it when you call them a moron."[ch. 6])
I don't think so.
I think it's to do with keeping name short enough for easy calling by a radio commentator.
She asks Holden to name one thing that he likes. Holden hesitates to think of anything but says he likes talking to her [Phoebe]
i think so
I think major._.flavor
Holden eventually feels guilty and remorseful for what he did to Mr. Antolini. He recognizes that he may have judged him unfairly and regrets his hasty actions.
Holden is not quite sure, but says that it sounded like "Good Luck!" which he (Holden) hopes it wasn't, as he thinks it "sounds terrible, if you think about it".
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.
The Holden FX I think