《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感1000字

《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感1000字

2020-11-19热度:作者:hchj5.com来源:好词好句网

话题:The Catcher in the Rye 读后感 

  《The Catcher in the Rye》是一本由J. D. Salinger著作,Back Bay Books出版的Paperback图书,本书定价:USD 13.99,页数:288,特精心从网络上整理的一些读者的读后感,希望对大家能有帮助。

  《The Catcher in the Rye》精选点评:

  ●Personally this book is too little and too much at the same time, unbearably depressing.

  ●it's really a good book and all.

  ●很顺畅的读下来 符合当下心境...

  ●有一点自我意识又孤独,大概很多少年都经历过这个阶段吧。不知道为什么要叫作伤痕文学。

  ●去年读中文版读不下去,今年读英文版一口气读下来,我越来越同情自己,时间进步了六十年,我发现自己是另一个霍尔顿,也许比他更糟糕。

  ●why cry, holden. it's just human. the all-too-human.

  ●想要追寻这世界上的纯洁与真理,却是不可避免的愤世嫉俗。看到这个世界的平庸,可无法超越。想要逃跑但又想留下。挡不住真实的痛苦和恐惧也不能追求飘渺的自由。其实仔细想想生活也没有那么糟,总觉得自己好像谁都不喜欢,对什么事都提不起兴趣,但是却往往在夜深人静的时候想起每个有过交集的人,我对他们是有真切的想念的。甚至希望他们都可以出现在身边听着音乐跳舞。虽然不知道这一年又一年的过去是件好事还是坏事,但是至少日子还是有可以期待的部分。不仅仅是未知的真理,还有和所有人的重逢。

  ●8

  ●一开始觉得这书到底有什么好看的不就是愤青的愤言愤语吗?看到最后他对妹妹那么温柔居然有点感动了~看了下中文版的评论感觉大家都在说什么啊?怎么那么多感想?!

  ●die nobly和live humbly

  《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感(一):在麦田里等你

  想要追寻这世界上的纯洁与真理,却是不可避免的愤世嫉俗。看到这个世界的平庸,可无法超越。想要逃跑但又想留下。挡不住真实的痛苦和恐惧也不能追求飘渺的自由。

  其实仔细想想生活也没有那么糟,总觉得自己好像谁都不喜欢,对什么事都提不起兴趣,但是却往往在夜深人静的时候想起每个有过交集的人,我对他们是有真切的想念的。甚至希望他们都可以出现在身边听着音乐跳舞。

  虽然不知道这一年又一年的过去是件好事还是坏事,但是至少日子还是有可以期待的部分。不仅仅是未知的真理,还有和所有人的重逢。

  《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感(二):救救孩子

  This book killed me. It really did. 如果你对这本书嗤之以鼻,或许你已经成为了“大人”。

  曾经夜里走路到灯下,会小心翼翼不要踩着自己的影子。不和班级里好看的女生说话,竭力装出很冷漠的姿态。回想着两年前还在上小学的自己,开始感伤岁月的流逝。在长大的过程中,我们谁没有过这种自以为是,特立独行的阶段呢?

  因为穿了一件妈妈织的略显臃肿的鲜艳毛衣到班级里,而受到同学的嘲笑。因为忘记带作业,而被老师当众批评“没做就要诚实”。想周末和爸妈去公园,他们却早已安排好了牌局。当天真的童心,被现实撞得粉碎,拼起来的时候,他们说“你长大了”。

  叔本华说,太早谙熟世事的人,意味着本性的平庸。而我们的社会,允许我们从容的长大么?我们不让钟美美说话,我们让缪可馨要传递正能量。我们自己过着虚伪的人生还不够,还迫不及待的要把孩子也变得和我们一样。有的爸妈自己还没长大,却已经开始逼迫孩子去实现他自己曾经的梦想。

  Holden几乎几乎就抛下一切去西部了,如果不是他还那么爱Phobe,甚至爱那些phony bastards。可是,不是每个孩子都像Holden那样幸运的。小孩子的世界很小,他们的天空很容易崩塌的。如果我们不能为他们撑起这片天,至少不要污染它。

  《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感(三):不成熟的人

  quot;The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one."

  我对这本书的理解可能还是不太多吧,读完后的感觉就是,一个愤世嫉俗,看破红尘的偏激小伙子在经历急速跌宕后对过去的人和事的怀恋。

  Holden在我眼里就是一个偏激的人,基本上没有一件事是他看的惯的,尤其是对人与人之间虚假做作的东西,在他眼里可以放大十倍。但是不得不说,读到他所描写的一些phony的事,我也会想:“这个说得对!”比如他描写的校长对穿着相貌不同的家长是怎样分别对待的,还有他对那些衣冠楚楚却只会卖弄学识的人的讥讽,以及对那个死要自己观点不放的同学最后摔死的讲述,包括后来只有一个人把他抱走的事......很多地方他都说得不错,我会想,是的,这些事我也遇到过。但是不同的是,他就是看不惯这些——这些就是实际存在,他自己控制不了的事。于是他就变得偏激,自甘堕落。

  可是我想说的是,这就是生活的规则。一个人不可能做到不与人交流,在社会上生存避免不了客套与虚假,可Holden却想装聋,从此不与人交流;他爱随性的事,他喜欢随性一辈子;他想做那个自由自在与孩子嬉戏追逐的the catcher in the rye;他还幻想住在慵懒的cabin里面;他希望那个英语考试上的人能说完他真正想说的,而非死抓着中心不放;他喜欢跟他那天真无邪的小妹妹讲话,看她玩儿旋转木马......我想这也是大多数人想做的,可是他们不能,心里的憧憬不能与实际生活所重合的悲哀就Holden的心中愈演愈烈,因为他不想像大多数人那样去改变自己的想法,适应生活的规则。这让我想起了五月天的一句歌词:当生存是规则,不是你的选择,于是你含着眼泪,飘飘荡荡跌跌撞撞的走着。

  我想,这就是Mr.Antolini对Holden说得那句话,事实就是Holden就是不成熟的那种人。他天真烂漫的妹妹寄托了他对无忧无虑的向往,看着他的妹妹,他才是最愉快的。

  《The Catcher in the Rye》读后感(四):麦田里的守望者

  利用午休时间,来谈谈这本书。这本书读的算快的,每天睡前翻一翻,昨天晚上一口气翻了70几页,书总是越读到后面越快。James Castle和Mr. Antolini的描写有惊到我,尤其Mr. Antolini,惊吓程度不亚于当年读The Turn of the Screw.不多剧透了,还是留给大家一些阅读的空间与想象。

  要剧透了,想看书的小朋友们可以直接跳过这部分。

  前半本书一直在讲主人公Holden Caufield从学校开除以后的种种在纽约流浪的经历。其中自然的穿插了很多倒叙部分,现在想想完全不觉得突兀,不得不说作者Salinger叙事能力之强大。而且Mr. Antolini那部分简直让我觉得作者太强大了!

  满书充斥着主人公对于身边一切的不屑,觉得什么都是phony,如果可以借用冯唐的话,这真是一本充满了肿胀的书!其实不管是哪个人物,打架也好搭讪也好,教导也好交谈也好,主人公跟其他人其实都是很疏离的状态,或者是他不愿让别人探知,或者是他不愿探知别人。即使到最后与Mr. Antolini稍微终于深入交流以后,却突然怀疑Mr. Antolini真心所在。于是深夜逃离他的公寓。一切都充满了对现实的不满,怀疑与不安。不满自己,不满他人。Phoebe这个人物太让我喜欢,年纪很小,但是洞察力却很强,而且她是真心爱她的哥哥。所以当这样一个对一切都充满了不屑充满了厌倦其实也充满了不安的哥哥想要逃离时,是Phoebe的一个举动让哥哥突然间泪流满面,第一次觉得幸福。也最终决定了留下来。

  书的结尾没有交待Holden之后是怎样的人生,但是明显看出他终于决定settle down,也接受去看父母安排的心理分析师,尽管他也许仍然觉得这很phony, lol.

  Holden至少是个真实的有血有肉的人,也许在迷茫,但是他的内心是希望这个世界可以好起来,他希望自己就像在麦田里的守望者,守护着小朋友们不要掉下悬崖。大概作者也希望这本书是个守望者,让所有正在迷茫的青年们看到希望,看到有人也在经历同样的过程,看到生活其实就是这样,没有那么好也没有那么糟。为了自己爱和爱自己的人好好生活,对社会尽自己的一份力,对这个世界作出自己应尽的一份价值就是了。也许对于像Holden一样的人因为内心的纯净与执着,初入社会的时候会比较棱角分明,甚至会因为周围与自己想象的不符而失落迷茫。这并不一定是坏事。但是一直这样棱角分明充满敌意对于自己,对于整个大的社会来说未必有任何建设性作用。所以,与周围妥协,对事物的看法慢慢褪去偏激,也是成长的一个必经过程。

  几个我喜欢的片段:

  Holden说女孩子们就是这样,如果喜欢一个人,即使他再conceited,也会说这个人how humble;如果不喜欢一个人,即使他再humble,也会因为一点点小事就觉得这个人too conceited!

  220

  quot;You don't like anything that's happening." (Phoebe said)

  224

  quot;If a body meet a body coming through the rye". (by Robert Burns)

  quot;Anyway, I keep picturing all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all. Thousands of little kids, and nobody's around- nobody big, I mean- except me. And I'm standing on the edge of some crazy cliff. What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff- I mean if they're running and they don't look where they're going I have to come out from somewhere and catch them. That's all I'd do all day. I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all I know it's crazy, but that's the only thing I'd really like to be. I know it's crazy."

  244

  quot;The whole arrangement's desinged for men who, at some time or other in their lives, were looking for something their own environment couldn't supply with. Or they thought their own environment couldn't supply with. So they gave up looking. They gave it up before they ever really even got started."

  quot;I don't want to scare you, but I can very clearly see you dying nobly, one way or another, for some highly unworthy cause." (Mr. Antolini)

  quot;Here's what he said: 'The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.'"

  246

  quot;Among other things, you'll find that you're not the first person who was ever confused that you're not the first person who was ever confused and firghtened and even sickened by human behavior. You're by no means alone on that score, you'll be excited and stimulated to know. Many, many men have been just as troubled morally and spiritually as you are right now. Happily, some of them kept records of their troubles. You'll learn from them- if you want to. Just as someday, if you have something to offer, someone will learn something from you. It's a beautiful reciprocal arrangement. And it isn't education. It's history. It's poetry."

  quot;I'm not trying to tell you that only educated and scholarly men, if they're brilliant and creative to begin with- which, unfortunately, is rarely the case- tend to leave infinitely more valuable records behind them than men do who are merely brilliant and creative. They tend to express themselves more clearly, and they usually have a passion for following their thoughts through to the end. And- most important- nine times out of ten they have more humility than the unscholarly thinker."

  249

  I laid awake for just a couple of seconds thinking about all that stuff Mr. Antolini'd told me. About finding out the size of your mind and all. He was really a pretty smart guy. But I couldn't keep my goddam eyes open, and I fell asleep.

  Then something happened. I don't even like to talk about it.

  I woke up all of a sudden. I don't know what time it was or anything but I woke up. I felt something on my head, some guys' hand. Boy, it really scared hell out of me. What it was, it was Mr. Antolini's hand. What he was doing was, he was sitting on the floor right next to the couch, in the dark and all, and he was sort of petting me or patting me on the goddam head. Boy, I'll bet I jumped about a thousand feet.