On Wednesday, a federal judge granted a temporary
              restraining order forbidding publication in the United States of “60 Years
              Later: Coming Through the Rye,” a takeoff on — J. D. Salinger’s lawyers
              say rip-off of — “The Catcher in the Rye,” written by a young Swedish writer
              styling himself J. D. California.Until the judge makes her final ruling, Mr.
              Salinger’s fans will be spared the prospect of encountering Holden Caulfield,
              the ultimate alienated teenager, as a lonely old codger who escapes from a retirement
              home and his beloved younger sister, Phoebe, as a drug addict sinking into
              dementia.But Holden may have bigger problems than
              the insults of irreverent parodists and other “phonies,” as Holden would put
              it. Even as Mr. Salinger, who is 90 and in ailing health, seeks to keep control
              of his most famous creation, there are signs that Holden may be losing his grip
              on the kids.“The Catcher in the Rye,” published in
              1951, is still a staple of the high school curriculum, beloved by many teachers
              who read and reread it in their own youth. The trouble is today’s teenagers.
              Teachers say young readers just don’t like Holden as much as they used to. What
              once seemed like courageous truth-telling now strikes many of them as “weird,” “whiny”
              and “immature.”The alienated teenager has lost much of his
              novelty, said Ariel Levenson, an English teacher at the Dalton School on
              Manhattan’s Upper East Side, Holden’s home turf. She added that even the
              students who liked the book tend to find the language — “phony,” “her hands
              were lousy with rocks,” the relentless “goddams” — grating and dated.“Holden Caulfield is supposed to be this
              paradigmatic teenager we can all relate to, but we don’t really speak this way
              or talk about these things,” Ms. Levenson said, summarizing a typical response.
              At the public charter school where she used to teach, she
              said, “I had a lot of students comment, ‘I can’t really feel bad for this rich
              kid with a weekend free in New York City.’ ”Julie Johnson, who taught Mr. Salinger’s
              novel over three decades at New Trier High School in Winnetka, Ill., cited
              similar reactions. “Holden’s passivity is especially galling and perplexing to
              many present-day students,” she wrote in an e-mail message. “In general, they
              do not have much sympathy for alienated antiheroes; they are more focused on
              distinguishing themselves in society as it is presently constituted than in trying
              to change it.”Of course, Holden has always had his
              detractors. Harcourt Brace, the publishing house that originally solicited “The
              Catcher in the Rye,” turned it down, saying it wasn’t clear whether Holden was
              supposed to be crazy. Later, highbrow critics like Joan Didion and George Steiner mocked his
              moral shallowness and “relatability.”But Holden won over the young, especially
              the 1960s generation who saw themselves in the disaffected preppy, according to
              the cultural critic Morris Dickstein. “The skepticism, the belief in the purity
              of the soul against the tawdry, trashy culture plays very well in the
              counterculture and post-counterculture generation,” said Mr. Dickstein, who
              teaches at the Graduate Center of the University of the City of New York.
              Today, “I wouldn’t say we have a more gullible youth culture, but it may be
              more of a joining or togetherness culture.”The culture is also more competitive. These
              days, teenagers seem more interested in getting into Harvard than in flunking
              out of Pencey Prep. Young people, with their compulsive text-messaging and
              hyperactive pop culture metabolism, are more enchanted by wide-eyed, quidditch-playing Harry Potter of Hogwarts than by the smirking
              manager of Pencey’s fencing team (who was lame enough to lose the team’s
              equipment on the subway, after all). Today’s pop culture heroes, it seems, are
              the nerds who conquer the world — like Harry — not the beautiful losers who
              reject it.Perhaps Holden would not have felt quite so
              alone if he were growing up today. After all, Mr. Salinger was writing long
              before the rise of a multibillion-dollar cultural-entertainment complex largely
              catering to the taste of teenage boys. These days, adults may lament the
              slasher movies and dumb sex comedies that have taken over the multiplex, but
              back then teenagers found themselves stranded between adult things and childish
              pleasures.As Stephanie Savage, an executive producer
              of the "Gossip Girl" television series, told National Public Radio last year, in Holden’s
              world “you can either go to the carousel in Central Park, or you can choose the
              Wicker Bar. You can have a skating date, or you can have a prostitute come up
              to your hotel room. There’s really not that sense of teen culture that there is
              now.”Some critics say that if Holden is less popular
              these days, the fault lies with our own impatience with the idea of a lifelong
              quest for identity and meaning that Holden represents.Barbara Feinberg, an expert on children’s literature
              who has observed numerous class discussions of “Catcher,” pointed to a story
              about a Holden-loving loser in the Onion headlined “Search for Self Called Off
              After 38 Years.”“Holden is somewhat a victim of the current
              trend in applying ever more mechanistic approaches to understanding human
              behavior,” Ms. Feinberg wrote in an e-mail message. “Compared to the early
              1950s, there is not as much room for the adolescent search, for intuition, for
              empathy, for the mystery of the unconscious and the deliverance made possible
              through talking to another person.”Ms. Feinberg recalled one 15-year-old boy from
              Long Island who told her: “Oh, we all hated Holden in my class. We just wanted
              to tell him, ‘Shut up and take your Prozac.’”
Catcher in the Rye? Couldn't get past chapter 2
             Is the classic novel losing its appeal among young readers? Also, young people still read?