Well, my fanfiction is about Sunny from The Catcher in the Rye. Sunny is the prostitute whom Holden Caulfield attempts to connect with, and not the kind of connect one would normally do with a prostitute. Holden attempts a real emotional connection with her. In my little fanfiction I am going to create my own little back-story for our little prostitute, but I have not done a whole lot of writing so I am sure it will be a woot, more or less.
Sunny is a young prostitute, to be exact she was “young as hell” and “she had a little weeny-winy voice” according to Mr. Holden Caulfield. So based on his, I am going to write of of that description.
Sunny came from a very high society set of pinkie raising tea drinkers for parents. Her parents Martin
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She began to rebel little by little but with little to no effect because as she noticed her parents did not notice her. Really, they payed her no attention at all, unless of course she sat wide legged or something else unladylike like, or even not raising her pinkie when drinking tea. She even stopped drinking tea all together in an effort to rebel, her own little Boston Tea Party. As she came to the realization that her parents paid her no attention, and everything, she just got u and left one day. At first she was just going to wait out until her parents showed some sign that they missed her, but all that came was a letter one day reminding her how to be a lady and not to do anything they would not do. It was this letter that sent her over the edge, from then on she only did things she thought her parents would completely disapprove of. This path led her to many interesting endeavors from belching to swearing to all kinds of unladylike behavior which ultimately led to her becoming a prostitute. She was at a loss or cash and she would not are ask er parents for help, and no one around would hire such an unskilled worker whom of which was suppose to be in high school. At this point in time there were just no were to apply for since all these women joined the workforce do to their husbands in the war. One day when walking the streets she walked into a man by the name of Maurice whom propositioned to a way to make money for such a young good looking girl. He began calling her Sunny because of her high class look, Samantha did not protest too much because she enjoyed the chance to further protest her family
After many years of ideas coming and going, one that seems to stay the same is the thoughts of tennagers. In the book The Catcher In The Rye written by J.D Salinger many can still relate to Holden’s story even after a 76 year difference. While exploring the city around him Holden takes the time to try to find himself on a deeper level and try to grasp how growing up really makes him feel. Given the fact that everyone is unique in among themselves the need for self satisfaction is always current meaning many run from the true responsibilities that come with age.
She was seduced at an early age and then fell in love with a preacher, but was overcome by an exciting younger man. She experienced every form of lust and desire as well as loss. Somehow though all the hardship she was able to come out on the other side a more complete woman and ironically did so without any of these
Charlie knows Jasper’s reputation but still manages to find a friend through the rumours. Racism and segregation has set in societal rules that Charlie overlooks through Silvey’s writing to send a message to us that everyone has a different side to them and that wrong assumptions and ignorance can influence racism.
This book is a good book. "What I was really hanging around for, I was trying to feel some kind of a good-by. I mean I've left schools and places I didn't even know I was leaving them. I hate that. I don't care if it's a sad good-by or a bad good-by, but when I leave a place I like to know I'm leaving it. If you don't, you feel even worse. ~J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye, Chapter 1
Books that have shaped America are slowly starting to disappear. Many of the previous social norms have fallen out of fashion, and because of this reason numerous books are beginning to become banned. Blasphemy, racism, sex, and violence are all ethical reasons for books to be censored.
As the student begins his essay, he points out that Sammy is part of the lower class structure. He is an “eighteen-year-old boy who is working as a checkout clerk in an A&P in a small New England town five miles from the beach” (2191). While working an afternoon shift on Thursday, he notices “these girls in nothing but bathing suits” (2191) enter the store. It is in this scene that the student begins to identify the differences between the group of girls and Sammy.
Sammy was obviously near the bottom of the class ladder, a place where he was extremely unhappy. His dead-end job at the grocery store, where lower class citizens are the prime patrons, was not a place he felt he belonged. He wanted to be a member of the family where the "father and the other men were standing around in ice-cream coats and bow ties and the women were in sandals picking up herring snacks on toothpicks off a big glass plate and they were all holding drinks the color of water with olives and sprigs of mint in them" (Updike 1028). Sammy realizes that Queenie comes from this sort of background, a very different one from his. When Queenie is being harassed by Lengel, Sammy sees that "she remembers her place, a place from which the crowd that runs the A & P must look pretty crummy" (Updike 1028). Queenie’s family was in the class that he envied, that he admired, that he wanted to become a part of.
Sammy worked a typical boring job and what seemed to be in a typical small town. The only person in the store he really related to was Stokesie, which is the foil to Sammy, because Stokesie is married, has kids and eventually wanted to be manger one day. Something Sammy did not want to stick around and see. The customers in the store were all pretty much the same, in which Sammy did not show much emotion towards except he referred to them as “the sheep pushing their carts down the aisle” (Updike 261). It is easy to tell Sammy did not like his job, but it also seemed he had no other option, as if he was stuck in his small town and there was no way out. Then out of the blue he saw three girls wearing only their bathing suites walk in the store. Sammy noticed something different about them, like they were liberated from the conservative values of those times; they were part of a new generation. Especially Queenie, he referred to...
The thoughts that ran through Sammy’s head questions all of us of what led him to make the changes of his “on track” adult lifestyle. Now a responsible young adult being 19 years old working a cash register and dealing with “Sheep” [customers] doesn’t quite cut it for him. Checking out groceries for people at the A&P local grocery store for quite some time , he decides to step up and be a hero by quitting his job as a reaction for three girls being expostulated, because of their attire clothing, by his boss Lengel. However, was he becoming a “hero” for three girls or a hero for his own self finally taking the opportunity to speak up for something he has been languishing to do so.
The story begins as if it is any mundane workday at the A&P. Sammy is a typical teen, making sarcastic comparisons of the customers in the grocery store. He calls one of his customers a "witch" and says the other customers are "house slaves" and "sheep." Sammy obviously dislikes the job, but finds ways of passing the day. However, from the moment the three girls enter the A&P to their exit from the store, you can see dramatic changes in Sammy. Sammy lusts for the young girls, and nicknames the most attractive to him as “Queenie”. The young girls dressed in bathing suits fascinate him, and although he is staring at them excessively, he negatively comments on the others for doing the same. As the girls walk past the older employee, McMahon, Sammy notices how he ogled the girls and pats his mouth. Sammy appears disgusted by his gesture and begins to sympathize for the girls. “Poor kids, I began to feel sorry for them, they couldn’t help it" (Upd...
In many novels written by J.D. Salinger, there is a recurring theme of love that
Jerome David Salinger, best known for his first and only published novel The Catcher in the Rye, is one of the most mysterious American authors in history. Born on January 1, 1919 in New York City to Sol and Miriam Salinger, Salinger grew up faced with criticism from the public, as his parents were of different ethnicities, and mixed marriages were highly looked down upon. His youth was spent transferring from different preparatory schools before he attended Valley Forge Military Academy, and upon graduating from Valley Forge, Salinger attended numerous colleges but did not graduate from any, but did excel in a short story class at Columbia University. He was drafted for World War II and fought in Europe, and when he returned to America, Salinger began to write more stories, and in 1951 he published what would be his only full-length novel, The Cather in the Rye. His remarkable novel set a new precedent for post-World War II literature and thrust Salinger into the lime light of literary fame, pushing Salinger into reclusiveness. J. D. Salinger’s attendance at Valley Forge Academy and fighting in World War II led to the creation of Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of his sole novel, The Catcher in the Rye.
“We were sort of royalty, almost infallible, with a sort of magic around us”(89). The old Charlie Wales lived during the economic boom of the 20’s, or other wise known as the jazz era. He lived a good life. During that time, he spent a lot of time drinking and throwing away money: “ he remembered thousand-franc notes given to an orchestra for playing a single number, hundred-franc notes tossed to a doorman for calling a cab”(90). Sometimes just acting childish with his friends Duncan Schaeffer and Lorraine Quarrles: “We did have such good times that crazy spring, like that night you and I stole that butcher’s tricycle…”(98). Nevertheless, he spent a lot of time in a bar called the Ritz. When he first got there, it was instinctive to give the head barman his numbers were he was staying as if it was his second home. “If you see Mr.Schaeffer, give him this…It’s my brother-inlaw’s address. I haven’t settled on a hotel yet”(86).
In the book The Catcher in the Rye Holden goes through every stage of grief from denial, depression to acceptance and reconstruction, which is illustrated in the novel .The Catcher and the Rye was written by J.D. Salinger and is a fictional story About Holden Caulfield. In this book he tells Holden story showing how he endures book holden goes through his Allies passing from leukemia then DB’s misuse of his pure talent and is left to set an example for phoebe that he has never had himself. This fact tells the great difficulty he will go through and how over time it will change Holden for the better and cure his “Madman Disease”. Holden undergoes one life changing event that, will continue coming up and, following him on through life causing him many flashbacks and difficulties.
They treated her very bad, Cindy had to do all the chores in the house in order to keep it clean. They ordered her around and gave her dirty clothes to wear. They would keep her locked in the basement so that no one would know that she was there. Cindy's life was made difficult, she often sits by the cinders and cry, and wish her parents had took her with them. But in the pass times, she would sing, which is something she loved with a passion.