Jennifer Davis and Dan Schulz – culture war censorship critics, satirical storytellers, banned books defenders, and irreverent humorists exploring challenged literature and book bans
The Catcher in the Rye Ch. 19: The Loneliest Kid at the Bar | Banned Books Comedy
APR 16, 202631 MIN
The Catcher in the Rye Ch. 19: The Loneliest Kid at the Bar | Banned Books Comedy
APR 16, 202631 MIN
Description
Holden heads to the Wicker Bar to meet Carl Luce, an older former student advisor from his Wooten days who knows a suspicious amount about everyone's private life. What follows is one long, uncomfortable bar conversation where Holden can't stop asking the wrong questions — and Luce can't wait to leave.
Banned Camp is a comedy podcast where we read banned books chapter by chapter — we don't read ahead, so you're discovering the story with us.
Things To Listen For:
Holden describes the Wicker Bar's lounge singers with a French accent that Jennifer fully commits to
Robot explains what "flits" means and Dan tries to figure out exactly how offensive it is
Jennifer notices something about Salinger's real message about gay people hiding who they are
Dan compares Holden to his dog Foxy — "the world is a lonely place if you bark at everyone"
Holden asks Luce about his older Chinese girlfriend's sex life and somehow thinks this is normal conversation
The chapter ends with one of the most honest lines in the book
Why was The Catcher in the Rye banned? This chapter includes repeated use of 1950s slang for gay men and an extended conversation about sex, sexuality, and psychoanalysis — exactly the kind of content that gets flagged by book challengers. But the real threat is Jennifer's observation: Salinger may be arguing that society forces people into being phonies by not letting them be who they are. That's the message book banners don't want teenagers to hear.
If this is your first episode, you're fine starting here. Our fact-checking Robot catches you up fast, then we read the next chapter (spoilers).
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Disclaimer Banned Camp features readings and discussions of banned books for the purpose of criticism, commentary, education, and entertainment, in accordance with fair use guidelines.
The material used from the book The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger is shared under these principles, with the intent of provoking thought and discussion about literature, censorship, and societal issues. The original work remains fully owned by its copyright holders, and we strongly encourage listeners to purchase a copy here to experience the book in its entirety.
This podcast is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially connected to J.D. Salinger, his estate, or the publishers of The Catcher in the Rye. Any monetization of the podcast is separate from the copyrighted material discussed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why was The Catcher in the Rye banned? The Catcher in the Rye has been one of the most frequently challenged books in America since its publication in 1951, and was the most censored book in the U.S. from 1961 to 1982. It's been removed from schools and libraries for profanity, sexual references, and "anti-social behavior" — but the deeper reason is that Holden Caulfield gives teenagers permission to question authority, reject conformity, and say out loud that the system feels broken. That's the part that actually scares book banners.
Is there a podcast that reads The Catcher in the Rye chapter by chapter? That's us. Banned Camp reads a different banned book every season, one chapter at a time — neither host has read ahead, so you're discovering the story together in real time. Season 10 covers The Catcher in the Rye, and every episode includes the chapter reading, discussion, a fact-checking Robot, and a segment on why books get banned.
Do I need to start Banned Camp from the beginning? No. Every episode opens with Robot's recap of the previous chapter, so you can jump in anywhere. Most listeners tell us they started mid-season and went back to the beginning after they were hooked.
Topics Covered: The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger, Chapter 19, Holden Caulfield, Carl Luce, Wicker Bar, sexuality, loneliness, phoniness, banned books, banned books podcast, book banning, censorship, literary analysis, comedy podcast