There is something wistful about this novel. It makes me feel like Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s is a place I’ve been to before. It reminds me of a time in life when parties happened at all hours, when people came and went, where the normal rules of life were thrown out the window and where intense relationships happen and then quickly disappear leaving that mysterious footprint of “whatever happened to…?”, knowing that that person irrevocably changed the DNA of your own life, making it seem much grayer, so much less, without them.
That is the feeling I got when I read Breakfast at Tiffany’s. Of course, Audrey Hepburn brought Holly Golightly to life in a light, glamourous insouciant version that the world fell in love with. The real Holly, Truman Capote’s Holly, is in fact much darker, a much more layered person. When she and her brother are orphaned at a young age and she marries at 14 she runs away from this life and the person she is. She is a young, beautiful girl who reinvents herself as a highly sought after social escort who lives life as if each moment were a holiday. Holiday Golightly – Traveling is what’s written on her business cards.
The story is told from the point of view of “Fred”, a struggling young writer, who gets to know Holly when she moves into an apartment in his old brownstone in New York during the second world war. He first meets her when she appears on his fire escape but long before that, he heard the music, the parties and the voices of an endless stream of middle-aged men who came and went from her flat.
Over the course of the year and half that he knows her, Fred, a name that she gives him because he reminds her of her brother, is pulled into the slipstream of Holly Golightly, who entertains Hollywood directors, wealthy gentleman she dines with nightly and who dreams of marrying rich. Her solace, when she seeks it, is at Tiffany’s which offers an almost realized form of the life she longs for.
Her invented self is so large that the distance between it and reality is far enough that you fear that she’ll never find that centre that everyone needs to understand where they belong. “It could go on forever.” she says “Not knowing what’s yours until you’ve thrown it away.” There are only a few moments in the book where the rawness and vulnerability of her true self is momentarily revealed and it grabs your heart in the same way as when you see a wounded animal.
I had wanted to read this because I have recently seen “Capote” and I became intrigued with Truman Capote, the man who had written In Cold Blood, a genre breaking book of the 60’s. In spite of the outward lightness of Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Capote ably traverses the darker shades of the human experience and I quite liked it.
Reblogged this on A Sane Tea-Party.
Loved your review! I am a fan of this novella & the movie. Thank you for sharing! Check out my own review & literature blog when you have a chance 🙂 http://asaneteaparty.com/2015/02/23/breakfast-at-tiffanys-by-truman-capote-2/#comment-2
Hi there, Thanks for stopping by and sharing the review. I’ll check out your blog for sure, I just did a review of Station Eleven which was a great read. Tess
The novella and the movie are both admirable works of art. I’ve read the book a half dozen times. Could you expound on what you mean by “a highly sought after social escort”?
My take on Holly is that she is a popular escort…