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Book Review: Breakfast at Tiffany’s: A Short Novel and Three Stories by Truman Capote

Image of a broken plate and fork on a book cover.Summary:
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
A nameless narrator recalls the eccentric 19 year old neighbor he once had in New York City–Holiday Golightly.  He reflects on their friendship of just over one year, and wonders where she is now.

“House of Flowers”
Ottilie works as a prostitute in Port Au Prince. She lives in a beautiful house with fine things, but one day at a cock fight, she falls in love and leaves the city for the country with her new husband. Will she regret her decision?

“A Diamond Guitar”
A man in prison for 99 years plus 1 day in a tropical location is well-respected by the other prisoners for his ability to read. One day, a new inmate arrives serving a 2 year sentence. He is young, beautiful, and can play the guitar wonderfully.

“A Christmas Memory”
A man recalls his early Christmases spent with an older relative who had never wandered far from home, but had a love of life the other adults in his family mistook for a bad influence.

Review:
I read this book due to watching Breakfast at Tiffany’s (review) and really enjoying it.  Various friends told me they were curious to know my reaction to the different ending in the book, so I decided to read it.

Capote’s strength as a writer is in setting the scene.  I could vividly picture the scenes in every single story, despite their vastly different settings.  This is what made the stories readable in spite of their plotlines being not particularly my cup of tea.  I felt that Capote just approached the edge of something phenomenal, biting, and truthful, but then stopped.  Stories that could have been touching and powerful were therefore decidedly average.

What I loved about the movie version of Breakfast at Tiffany’s is that it took a loving look at someone with mental issues and showed how she could get better.  There is none of that hope in the short novel.  Holly comes off entirely as someone out to use other people, and there is an unforgivable scene with her cat.  I came away hating Holly, whereas I felt I was made to understand a possibly unlikable person in the film.  This made the short novel quite disappointing and is exemplary of everything I disliked in this collection of Capote’s works.

That said, his writing style is highly readable, and I enjoyed the message in “A Christmas Memory” very much, even if the title is entirely uncreative.

My advice to any who love the film is to skip this if they wish their opinion of the characters to remain untarnished.  Those who enjoy mid 20th century American short fiction will enjoy this collection, however.

3 out of 5 stars

Source: PaperBackSwap

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Movie Review: Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961)

January 7, 2010 10 comments

Summary:
Aspiring writer and kept man Paul moves into a new apartment building where he meets quirky Holly Golightly.  Holly pays her bills by going on dates with wealthy men and sneaking off with the $50 they give her for the power room.  The two start to entwine into each other’s lives, and Paul discovers there’s more to Holly than meets the eye.

Review:
As I was watching, I thought this was a meh movie, but then in the last five minutes I suddenly came to love it.  That’s what classic movies can do that modern movies often don’t.  They set up a world that just seems average, but then blow your mind in the end with what you’ve actually seen and learned about the characters.  You’re being touched while watching the movie without even realizing it.

The film moves at a meandering pace that allows you to truly get a glimpse of NYC in the 1960s.  The outfits, the decor, the drinks, the smoking…..  It truly is a period piece.  There was one large sour note in the film that is reflective of when it came out though in the form of Holly’s upstairs neighbor, who is the definition of a racist caricature of Asians, and he wasn’t even played by an Asian or Asian-American actor.  I wish he wasn’t in the movie, but it is reflective of the times.

Holly Golightly is such a well-written character.  You alternate between identifying with her, loathing her, and feeling sorry for her, and that is what makes her seem like such a real person.  By the ending, I really wasn’t sure if I hated or cared for her, but either way, I understood her.  That’s a wonderful thing to come to understand someone who has the issues Holly does.

If you enjoy classic films or films built around careful character building, give Breakfast at Tiffany’s a shot.  I doubt you’ll be disappointed.

4 out of 5 stars

Source: Netflix

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