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hobsonphile April 27 2007, 12:04:00 UTC
I heard you. Every day. I heard you speak to me.

His hands touch the scar on his chest, following the faint tingling in his flesh. It is all the sensation that he will ever have in that area, the Doctor told him regretfully. A numbness where his heart should be.

I heard you, Saul. I came back.

Oh, oh, oh! *melts*

You know just how to get to a hopeless Tigh!fangirl's heart. *loves all over this fic*

Also: Allow me to bake you a WORD pie while I'm here. I briefly hated my advanced placement literature teacher for making me read Catcher in the Rye. The schools around here seem to be under the impression that Holden is uniquely accessible to teenagers, but when I was a teenager, I saw right through his bull.

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kangeiko April 27 2007, 13:31:13 UTC
Oh, I'm so glad you liked it! *g* You know, I don't often write BSG fic, 'cause I can't, basically, and especially Tigh, because he DENIES me, damnit. But he is lovely nonetheless. *nods*

The schools around here seem to be under the impression that Holden is uniquely accessible to teenagers,

Erm... well, privileged male drop-out teenagers, maybe. The vast majority of teenagers, no. I was briefly wondering if Holden was actually dead while doing his narration, which would have made me like him a little more, 'cause at least it would have implied, I don't know, growth. But he's so convinced of his own superiority, AND HE REMAINS CONVINCED OF IT. Gaaah!!!

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selenak April 27 2007, 14:07:39 UTC
privileged male drop-out teenagers

*is evil*

Like Mark David Chapmann, who had the book with him when he killed John Lennon and professed to have read it ad infinitum as a teen?

I did read the book as a teenager, in school, and went a bit easier on Holden than you did, plus it taught me some new English words I had not known until then, like "phony", but I don't think I ever read it again...

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kangeiko April 27 2007, 14:25:59 UTC
Like Mark David Chapmann, who had the book with him when he killed John Lennon and professed to have read it ad infinitum as a teen?

You're gonna have to explain that one to me, 'cause I wasn't even born then, I don't think ('80? Right?), or if I was, I was in Communism. So. I know nothing, other than to recognise John Lennon as one of the Beatles. Did this Mark person think that Lennon was a 'phony'?

I did read the book as a teenager, in school, and went a bit easier on Holden than you did, plus it taught me some new English words I had not known until then, like "phony", but I don't think I ever read it again...

I don't know. In my head, this was a Depression book, although I'm probably wrong and it was a fifties book, or something. It read like a Depression book to me, which made me really hostile to Holden, who seemed ridiculously rich and spoiled to me - actually, he seems rich and spoiled no matter the setting (living in a hotel??). So, it might be a little odd, but in my head it was grouped with the Steinbeck novels, and a ( ... )

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selenak April 27 2007, 16:07:49 UTC
Actually, you can date the novel definitely long post depression, as Holden mentions seeing Laurence Olivier's movie version of Hamlet (which he doesn't like). It's set in the early 50s, when Salinger wrote it. And Holden is rich and spoiled, no matter the setting.

John Lennon, Mark David Chapman... wow. This is really a case of age difference. Chapman was a classic case of fanboy gone wrong, and yes, saw J.L. as having sold out and having become a phony. He waited with other fans in front of Lennon's New York home, got his autograph on the newest record of Lennon's, and then shot him. The other thing he had with him was Catcher in the Rye, and he was reading from it when they arrested him. He had modelled his life so much after John Lennon that he also married a Japanese American woman older than himself. (More extensive description of the incident is here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lennon#Death)

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kangeiko April 29 2007, 13:19:19 UTC
Thanks, I'll check it out!

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