Breakfast at Tiffany'S by Truman Capote, , 0679745653 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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Breakfast at Tiffany'S, cheap new, used books  Breakfast at Tiffany'S: A Short Novel and Three Stories (First Vintage International)
Author: Truman Capote  
ISBN: 0679745653   /   Paperback
Publisher: Random House USA Inc   /   1993-12-31
List Price: £7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Four Tales of Belonging     
The well-known short novel, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and three of Truman Capote's most famous short stories make for a continually fresh and exciting look at how human beings successfully connect with one another. No matter how many times you read these stories, you will be moved by Mr. Capote's marvelous sense of and appreciation for the specialness of each life and the ways we belong to each other. Having not read Breakfast at Tiffany's for about 30 years, I came away much more impressed with the novel than I was the last time I read it. Perhaps you will have the same reaction upon rereading it as well. If you are reading it for the first time, you have a very nice surprise ahead of you!

Breakfast at Tiffany's revolves around Holly Golightly, the former starlet and cafe society item, who floats lightly through life (like cotton fibers in the wind) looking for where she belongs. Ms. Golightly is and will remain one of the most original and intriguing characters in American fiction. Like a magician, she is both more and less than she seems. But she has an appreciation for people and animals that goes to the core of her soul that will touch you (if you are like me), especially in her desire that they and she be free.

The novel has a harder edge and is more revealing about human nature than the movie is. Of the two, I suggest you start with the novel and graduate to the movie. You will appreciate the portrayal by Audrey Hepburn of the inner Holly more that way. The same humor is in both the novel and the movie, as well as the innocent look at life for what it can be, believing in the potential of things to work out for the best.

Despite that upbeat note, her weakness is that for all of her ability to understand what motivates other people she does not understand herself well enough to know when she does belong with and to others. This is symbolized by her abandonment of her unnamed cat, and quick realization that they do belong together. As for the friends she leaves behind, she never seems to appreciate how much they love her and want to be with her. As a result, she abandons them as well . . . leaving them with memories to warm their winter nights.

Mr. Capote is now realized to have been a more autobiographical writer than was appreciated when he first published his fiction. Your understanding of Breakfast at Tiffany's will grow if you keep in mind that it was modeled in part on his friendship with Marilyn Monroe. If you do not know her history, you will find that it closely paralleled Holly's through age 18.

The same is true of his short story, A Christmas Memory. I suggest that you read about Mr. Capote's childhood in the book, A Southern Haunting of Truman Capote, to fully appreciate the magic of this story. His friend in the story was based on a beloved figure in his young life, who endowed him with a special sense of being loved and appreciated that formed an important foundation for his character and his skill as a writer. The beautiful devotion that she showed to him is reflected in the loving descriptions he makes of their experiences during their last Christmas together before he was shipped off to military boarding schools at age 8.

A Diamond Guitar is about the Platonic love of an older man for a younger one in prison. Like all unrequited love, the older man eventually finds himself embarrassed and exposed. But the experience remains a touchstone to tender feelings in his heart, and he keeps his young friend's glass-diamond-studded guitar under his bed . . . even though it doesn't sound good when others play it and is becoming shabby with age.

House of Flowers is a hard look at the vast differences in the ways that women and men view their relationships with one another. Even when loving, the message seems to be that the men will always take advantage of the women. The women, however, acquire soulful beauty in their ability to overcome that needy exploitation and appreciate belonging to one another and to the men.

This story tells the tale of a young woman who works in a house of ill fame in Haiti, and is charmed into "marrying" a young, poor hill man who is dominated by his spell-casting grandmother. Together, the young couple overcome the challenge, and build on their love for one another.

Budding novelists are sometimes encouraged to study nature closely to draw inspiration. Although I do not know if Mr. Capote ever received or followed that advice, it is very clear that he retained a childlike ability to see the world as fresh and new every time. No detail, no nuance, no quirk was too small or unimportant to pass by him or to fail to cast its charm upon him. Kindly and gently, Mr. Capote takes the reader by the hand and shows what makes these elements so interesting to him. In this way, the reader's world is expanded, enlightened, and improved.

These four stories reverbrate against one another, like the continuing vibrations after a large bell after pealing four times, and create a combined effect beyond what any single story can provide.

After you have finished enjoying these stories and the movie, I suggest that you makes some notes about where you belong, who you belong with and to, and what that says about you. In this way, you can notice important connections that mean a lot to you and others that you may be slighting. Honor those tendrils in the way that Mr. Capote would if he were writing a story about your life.

Notice and touch life intimately and lovingly to find truth and beauty!

Perfect     
"I am always drawn back to places where I lived, the houses and their neighbourhoods" is the perfect first sentence to a novella that is perfectly written. It is hard to describe prose that is so elegant and describes characters and situations with spareness, yet with such depth and feeling.

Just as you experience New York in the early sixties in the film, you experience New York in the 1940s in Capote's story. Holly Golightly runs from herself -- and keeps running -- but the reader is not left with any sense of loss, only warmth.

"Breakfast at Tiffany's" is a true work of art. Displace one word and its genius would diminish. It is highly recommended.

Hooked...     
I bought the book yesterday morning, not knowing much about it; I haven't even had the chance to see the film yet! Anyway, I finished it last night. It is the most hooked I have ever been on a book. If you, like me, are a keen reader of JD Salinger, then this is a good read. I have't read the other stories as of yet but intend to later today.
Love Holly Golightly     
This book's highlight is not its story, however fluid and lyrical as well as imaginitive, but it's main character, Holly Golightly. She is one of the most likeable characters in literature; the one star marked off is for the vagueness of what happened to her, since the story is so short, you can't help but wonder and care what happened to her. In most versions, you will also have the short story, "A christams memory". READ this. this story is the most sentimental short story i've ever read.
Excellent.     
This book is an excellent example of fine, artistic writing. It is really a work of art. You cannot change a word without spoiling it. I did not know much about Capote before reading this book, and did not know about the film, which I will certainly NOT watch after having read this richly textured, outstanding example of style and skilled story-telling. The characters in this book become alive as you read it, even though the plot of this novella is less than likely. This is a tender book, a sentimental one, a book with a broad perspective. This is not a single-minded book which tells a straightforward story, but this book gives room for the reader's imagination and makes the reader the author's accomplice. This book leaves the impression of an improvised, lightly told story, but in reality it hinges on extremely careful composition. After reading this book, you want to know "more". I believe that this experience is one of the characteristics of truly great books: Upon having read the last page, you feel dissatisfied and restless, and it aches to move on to something new. The book lives on in your mind like an unresolved riddle. Breakfast at Tiffany's is an excellent example of this kind of book. Comparing to other books supposedly qualifying for great literary classics, I rate this one a premier candidate. It outperforms other great books such as "The great Gatsby", and it is very American.
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