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Search resuls for: "Holden Caulfield"


2 mentions found


My First Trip to ‘Rubyfruit Jungle’
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | by ( Trish Bendix | Scott Heller | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
The precocious and fearless protagonist of Rita Mae Brown’s 1973 novel “Rubyfruit Jungle” has served as a model of possibility for generations of young women, lesbians and outsiders of all kinds. Both of its time and ahead of it, “Rubyfruit Jungle” has inspired countless lives, works of art and Sapphic-themed spaces. Maybe just the first one toward whom I was evenly split between wanting and wanting to be — a category that only grew over time, and included heartthrobs of all genders. I read “Rubyfruit” over and over, starting around 11 or 12, still a couple of years out from my first kiss with a girl. I, too, wanted to hitch to New York where the other artists were, where the other queers lived.
Persons: Molly Bolt, Holden Caulfield, Rita Mae Brown’s, , Melissa Febos, Molly, Huck, Holden, Pip Organizations: Bantam Locations: New York
The Emotional Benefits of Wandering
  + stars: | 2022-12-15 | by ( Alison Gopnik | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Psychologist Alison Gopnik explores new discoveries in the science of human nature. One of my greatest pleasures is to be what the French call a “flâneur”—someone who wanders randomly through a big city, stumbling on new scenes. The surrealists used to choose a Paris streetcar at random, ride to the end of the line and then walk around. And think of Mrs. Dalloway in London, Leopold Bloom in Dublin or Holden Caulfield in New York. But is there any scientific evidence for the benefit of “street-haunting,” as Virginia Woolf called it?
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