Holden also flashes back to his past a lot. Holden is notoriously known for his anger, which lands him in some pretty sticky situations throughout the book. This sixteen-year-old boy who seems old beyond his years has plenty of stories to tell, from his awkward anecdotes about past girlfriends and irritating roommates, to how he got kicked out of school yet again, to his rather strange conversations with taxi drivers, but his story also teaches a few lessons. Salinger's timeless "The Catcher In The Rye," one can learn many lessons from the sarcastic, oft-depressed, but undeniably loveable narrator Holden Caulfield. I read this book after meeting Judy Blume on June 9 at the Printers Row Lit Fest. The lesson is do not try to spend money with fake money. And Mini is a little younger than Fudge who is 3. They sing in public when people say something that they like. And in five chapters it's about Peter, Fudge and Tootsie's cousins, Mini, Fauna, and Flora. He even tries to spend it! It's in the first six chapters. He likes money so much that he makes his own money called Fudge Bucks. It's about how much Fudge really likes money. She likes to copy every word that Fudge says like Uncle Feather. Uncle Feather copies everything that Fudge says. The main characters are Peter, Fudge, and Tootsie.
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