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Truman Capote

Crystal

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anyone knows any book from him, whose iq was said to be above 200? please share it? i did not read any of his books, but have heard about the movie Breakfast at Tiffiny's


American novelist, short story writer, and playwright. Capote gained international fame with his "nonfiction novel" IN COLD BLOOD (1966), an account of a real life crime in which an entire family was murdered by two sociopaths. The Louisiana-Mississippi-Alabama area provided the setting for much of Capote's fiction.

"Until one morning in mid-November of 1959, few Americans - in fact, few Kansans - had ever heard of Holcomb. Like the waters of river, like the motorists on the highway, and like the yellow trains streaking down the Santa Fe tracks, drama, in the shape of exceptional happenings, had never stopped there." (from In Cold Blood)
Truman Capote was born in New Orleans as the son of a salesman and a 16-year-old beauty queen, Lillie Mae Faulk. His father, Archulus "Arch" Persons, worked as a clerk for a steamboat company. Persons never stuck at any job for long, and was always leaving home in search for the new opportunities. The unhappy marriage gradually disintegrated, and Capote's parents divorced when he was four. The young Truman was brought up in Monroeville, Alabama. He lived some years with relatives, one of whom became the model for the loving, elderly spinster in several Capote's novels, stories, and plays. "Her face is remarkable - not unlike Lincoln's, craggy like that, and tinted by sun and wind," described Capote in A CHRISTMAS MEMORY (1966) his distant relative Sook, Nanny Rumbley Faulk. Sook was sixty-something, "small and sprightly, like a bantam hen..." Capote's mother, Lillie Mae, wrote letters and telephoned to her son, often crying that she had no money and no husband. When his mother married again, this time a well-to-do businessman, Capote moved to New York, and adopted his stepfather's surname.

In his childhood Capote made friends with Harper Lee, who portrayed him as Dill in her world famous novel To Kill a Mockingbird. "Dill was a curiosity. He wore blue linen shorts that buttoned to his shirt, his hair was snow white and stuck to his head like duckfluff; he was a year my senior but I towered over him. As he told us the old tale his blue eyes would lighten and darken; his laugh was sudden and happy; he habitually pulled at a cowlick in the center of his forehead." Capote started to write stories when he was only eight. He attended the Trinity School and St. John's Academy in New York, and the public schools of Greenwich, Connecticut, but ended his formal schooling at the age of seventeen. He found work at the New Yorker, and attracted attention with his eccentric style of dress. "... I recall him sweeping through the corridors of the magazine in a black opera cape, his long golden hair falling to his shoulders: an apparition that put one in mind of Oscar Wilde in Nevada, in his velvets and lilies." (Brendan Gill in Here at The New Yorker, 1975)

Capote's early stories were published in quality magazines and in 1946 he won O.Henry award. His first novel, OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS (1948), depicted a boy, Joel Knox, growing up in the Deep South. Joel is "too pretty, too delicate and fair skinned". He seeks his father but falls into a relationship with a decadent transvestite. The book gained a wide success and arose controversy because of its treatment of homosexuality. During this time Capote had already established his fame among the cultural circles as the thin voiced, promising young writer, who could brighten up parties with his sharp and clever remarks.

Next year Capote went to Europe, where he wrote fiction and non-fiction. Among his major works was a profile of Marlon Brando. Capote's travels accompanying a tour of Porgy and Bess in the Soviet Union produced THE MUSES ARE HEARD. Capote's European years marked the beginnings of his work for the theatre and films. In 1949 appeared A TREE OF NIGHT, which gathered together short stories which Capote had published in Harper's Bazaar, Mademoiselle, and other magazines. When the director John Huston was making The Asphalt Jungle (1950), Capote met Marilyn Monroe, who acted in the film. "With her tresses invisible, and her complexion cleared of all cosmetics, she looked twelve years old, a pubescent virgin who had just been admitted to an orphanage and is grieving her plight." (from Marilyn Monroe: Photographs 1945-1962 by Truman Capote)

In the 1950s Capote wrote THE HOUSE OF FLOWERS, a musical set in West Indies bordello. Capote's lyrical style and melancholy marked his novel THE GRASS HARP (1951). In the story an orphaned boy and two old ladies observe life from a china tree. Eventually they come down from their temporary retreat, unlike Cosimo Piovasco di Rondò in Italo Calvino's novel The Baron in the Trees (1957). The book was adapted into screen in 1996, starring Piper Laurie, Sissy Spacek, and Walter Matthau. Capote's first important film work was collaboration with John Huston on Beat the Devil (1954).

Following return to the United States, Copote wrote BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S (1958). The central character, Holly Golightly, is a young woman, who comes to New York seeking for happiness. She has a nameless cat and a brother named Fred. The nameless narrator is an aspiring writer, who has the same birthday as Capote (September 30) and who follows Holly's life, filled with colorful characters. "What I've found does the most good is just to get into a taxi and go to Tiffany's. It calms me down right away, the quietness and the proud look of it; nothing very bad could happen to you there..." The novel is constructed as a memory of events, that happened about 15 years earlier. Holly has left the country before the end of the war, and the narrator has not seen her since. The book was made into a successful film, starring Audrey Hepburn and directed by Blake Edwards. George Axelrod updated the story to the 1960s and later told: "Nothing really happened in the book. All we had was this glorious girl - a perfect part for Audrie Hepburn. What we had to do was devise a story, get a central romantic relationship, and make the hero a red-blooded heterosexual."

Increasing preoccupation with journalism formed basis for Capote's bestseller In Cold Blood, a pioneering work of documentary novel or "nonfiction novel". The work started from an article in The New York Times. It dealt with the murder of a wealthy family in Holcomb, Kansas. Sponsored by the magazine, Capote interviewed with Harper Lee local people to recreate the lives of both the murderers and their victims. The research and writing took six years to finish. Capote used neither tape recorder nor note pad, but emptied his interviews and impressions in notebooks at the end of the day. He also recorded last days of the death-obsessed criminals. (See Norman Mailer's journalistic works The Armies of the Nigh, Miami and the Siege of Chicago, Of Fire on the Moon.) Richard Brooks' screen adaptation of the book, with its black-and-white photography, avoided all sensationalism. The trial scene was re-enacted at the Finney County Court House in the Garden City, where the actual trial had taken place. Brooks also used the real jury who had convicted Perry Smith and Dick Hicock.

Among Capote's other works from the 1960s is the classic A Christmas Memory, a story about a seven-year-old boy, Buddy, his cousin, an eccentric old lady, and a tough little orange and white rat terrier called Queenie. Buddy and his cousin are each other's best friends, whose special relationship is symbolized by baking of fruitcakes, a kind of a Proustian Madeleine remembrance. The story gained a huge success as a television play. After the publication of In Cold Blood, Capote planned to write a Proustian novel to be called "Answered Prayers". However, problems with drink and drugs, and disputes with other writers, such as Gore Vidal, exhausted Capote's creative energies.

In interviews, Capote negative anecdotes about the people he knew distanced him from his friends. "I had a big discussion with Saul Bellow about Richard Wright," Capote said in 1974. "I said, Richard Wright was a good friend of mine and do you know what Saul Bellow said? He said, "Huh! Well, Wright just became a victim of these heavyweight intellectuals. I used to see him carting around books on Wittgenstein. He was convinced he was an intellectual." I thought that was very sad and pathetic." (The Critical Response to Truman Capote by Joseph J. Waldmeir, 1999)

Answered Prayers remained unfinished, but three stories from novel appeared in Esquire in the 1970s, and the surviving portions were republished in 1986. The autobiographical book presented such real-life as Colette, the Duchess of Windsor, Montgomery Clift, and Tallulah Bankhead, but its depiction of the smart set was characterized in The New York Times as "a socio-pornographic ''Ragtime'' rife with the low cackle of camp." MUSIC FOR CHAMELEONS (1981) was a collection of short pieces, stories, interviews, and conversations published in various magazines. Truman Capote died in Los Angeles, California, on August 26, 1984, of liver disease complicated by phlebitis and multiple drug intoxication.
 
I've read a smattering of his stuff. His first novel Other Voices, Other Rooms is precocious but not actually that good, quite overwritten as you might expect of a 23-year-old who wanted to display his literary skills. I've read Breakfast at Tiffany's but can't remember much about it. For me his best book is In Cold Blood, the "nonfiction novel" (the term he claimed to invent for it) which described the aftermath of a seemingly motiveless murder in smalltown America. Much controversy arose because of the nature of the subject matter and, later, belief that Capote had a sexual relationship with one of the murderers, Perry Smith - who certainly gets pretty lenient consideration in the book - while he was on death row.

After that he never completed another full-length book. I'm due soon to read his collection of occasional pieces Music for Chameleons, which includes another nonfiction account of a murder (Handcarved Coffins). He died before finishing his last novel, Answered Prayers, which was then published in part and which is very well written and quite entertaining but peopled with thinly disguised portrayals of society figures that you feel you should know but don't. Indeed, when the chapters of Answered Prayers were published in Esquire as works in progress, they lost Capote most of his friends as they recognised themselves in the characters.

Capote sometimes seems like one of those writers - like Wilde - where the life is as interesting as the work. I recommend George Plimpton's oral biography which is gripping and well worth a read.
 
I concur with Shade.

IMO, Capote was not a great writer, he was more of a public personality. Breakfast at Tiffany's is not a great novel, but is famous because of Audrey Hepburn's stylish, self-conscious performance in the movie. It's actually rather a stupid, sappy movie, but people just love the way she looks in it. She was the last actress to get away with that exaggerated Europeanized pronunciation of English.

Truman himself will be remembered not as a fine writer but as a flamboyant personality who betrayed the confidences of his NYC acquaintances. He was sued by Gore Vidal for slanderous gossip in Answered Prayers that proved to be unsupportable. Capote lost the case. He also became a caricature of himself. I saw an interview he did, with David Frost I think, where he was so drugged and messy that he wept and carried on and was truly pathetic.
 
In Cold Blood is phenomenal, you should start it when you have a nice block of time to read because you won't be able to put it down. Really an amazing work. Nothing else he did measures up to it.

His bio is the thing, though. His life was a kind of performance art, really.
 
I read "In Cold Blood". It was good, but Truman Capote was never one of my favorite writers. After I read "In Cold Blood", oddly enough, I met the family who were murdered paper boy, who delivered their paper that morning. Very Eerie.
 
Thank you, all, for these precious infomation about him, which i am not sure i would get from other places.
 
A favourite Capote story: Capote and Harper Lee were childhood friends. So the rumour goes, Harper Lee actually wrote In Cold Blood, because she was much more small-town friendly than the flamboyant, cosmopolitan Capote, whilst he penned To Kill a Mockingbird, with the Jem-Dill friendship, being a fictionalised account of Lee-Capote. I love the idea of them swapping around credits, even if it may well be an apocryphal tale...
 
You should all read the biography of Harper Lee called Mockingbird. Her notes from her research work for Truman Capote while working on In Cold Blood are very telling. He was very jealous of her and actually didn't list her as a his research assistant. She was one of his few true friends and he was just a petty , drunken mess by the end.
 
I am reading In coold blood now. I think it's rather good. I haven't ready so much yet but what I've read it's really good.
 
A favourite Capote story: Capote and Harper Lee were childhood friends. So the rumour goes, Harper Lee actually wrote In Cold Blood, because she was much more small-town friendly than the flamboyant, cosmopolitan Capote, whilst he penned To Kill a Mockingbird, with the Jem-Dill friendship, being a fictionalised account of Lee-Capote. I love the idea of them swapping around credits, even if it may well be an apocryphal tale...

Let me get this right, Lee wrote ICB?? Come on now. From where did you get that idea?
 
Breakfast at Tiffany's is a charming novella. But think about it: the narrator is a wannabe writer who moves into a new home block of flats and meets a scatty young woman; promiscuous yet innocent, a fantasist about whose earlier life little actual fact is known; Holly Golightly is a dreamer. She's vulnerable and fragile, but crazy and always getting into trouble. She even gets pregnant in the course of the story.

Ring any bells?

She could be the twin sister of Sally Bowles in Christopher Isherwood's Goodbye to Berlin, the basis for Cabaret.

And in another coincidence, both authors were gay.
 
Truman Capote is an artist with words

I am amazed at folks saying that Capote is not a great writer. If you actually read Capote, the scenes he paints with words are magical. His ability to use words is amazing:

"And so Autum came. Is here at this moment, a tambourine wind, a ghost of smoke moving between the yellow trees.It has been a good year for grapes, sweet in the air is the smell of fallen grapes in the mold of leaves, new wine. The stars are out at six; still it is not too chilly to have a cocktail on the terrace and watch, in the bright starlight, the sheep with their Buster Keaton faces coming down from pasture, and the goats, whose herd-movement makes a sound like the dragging of dry branches. Yesterday men brought us a wagonload of wood. So I am not afraid of winter's coming: what better prospect than to sit by a fire and wait for spring?"
from: Portraits and Observations, The Essays of Truman Capote

I have always considered him to be one of my favorite if not my favorite writer (Fitzgerald is also among the top).

Sure his personal life was a mess... So what? So is mine... I just appreciate a writer for the way he puts words on paper, for the way his/or her mind works in the creation of art. That is what the truly great writers do - create art with words.

Everyone is, of course, entitled to their opinion. But if that opinion is colored by the fact that the writer lived/ or lives a different life than what we would choose.... isn't that one of the main reasons to read? To discover new worlds? I am just saying... the man was a genius, apparantly literally so it would be my first instinct to give him a bit of a break. :whistling:

I do carry on!!!
 
Someone recommended In Cold Blood to me a few years ago. ince then I tried to finish it twice. Personally I don't consider Capote a good writer based on this book. The book got famous because the crime he wrote aout became famous.
 
The 2005 movie Capotewas amazing. Philip Seymore Hoffman is also
incredible in it as Capote. The movie has to do with his research on in cold blood.
 
In Cold Blood

I consider In Cold Blood to be a departure for Capote. It is told, I think, from a journalistic viewpoint, (hense the name he coined, Non-fiction Novel), and has very little of the grace and fluid beauty his writing usually carries. The quote I used earlier was chosen at random from a Capote book I happened to have near the computer but is indicitive of the way he uses words to paint with. I enjoyed In Cold Blood cause I thought it was a pretty good Who Done It and wanted to find out the whole story, but do not let that one book put you off, for his other work is remarkable in its own right. Again, we are all entitled to our own opinion (as my Momma used to say, "That's why Baskin & Robbins has 31 flavors). It would be a shame if you would have enjoyed his other work but let In Cold Blood be the only introduction to him you ever got.
 
In Cold Blood was his masterpiece, in my opinion. It was the first of it's kind of the true crime "novel" form; well written, well researched; an absorbing book.

He did become a sad man, a clown almost in his later years; must have been hard for him after having been the "golden boy" for a number of years.
 
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