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Truman
Capote
BIO
Truman
Capote, born in New Orleans, LA., September 30, 1924, and
died on August 25, 1984, was a Southern Gothic novelist, journalist,
and celebrated man-about-town. He was widely hailed as a stylist
after publication of his earliest writings. These include
his novel of alienated youth, OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS (1948),
the Gothic short stories in A TREE OF NIGHT (1949), and the
lighter novel THE GRASS HARP (1951; play, 1952). The novella
BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S (1958; film, 1961) introduced the charming,
hedonistic Holly Golightly as a heroine. Childhood reflections
formed the basis of two short stories that were adapted for
television: "A Christmas Memory" (1956) and "The Thanksgiving
Visitor" (1968). Capote's nonfiction novel IN COLD BLOOD (1966;
film, 1967) was based on a 6-year study of the murder of a
rural Kansas family by two young drifters. Capote wrote about
the jet set in THE DOGS BARK: Public People and Private Places
(1973). ANSWERED PRAYERS, an unfinished novel, was published
posthumously in 1987.
--- Truman Capote was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on September
30, 1924.
--- His full name was Truman Streckfus Persons.
--- In 1931 his parents divorced and a year later his mother
remarried to Joseph Garcia Capote.
--- He changed his name to Truman Garcia Capote in 1935.
--- From 1941-1944 Capote worked as a copyboy at The New Yorker,
until he was fired for angering Robert Frost at his reading.
--- In 1945 "Miriam" and "The Jug of the Silver" was published
in Mademoiselle and "A Tree of Night" was published in Harper's
Bazaar.
--- A TREE OF NIGHT was published in 1949.
--- BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S was published in 1958.
--- Capote started to investigate the Clutters' murder case
(the case that inspired his book IN COLD BLOOD).
--- IN COLD BLOOD was published in 1966 and in 1967 the movie
version of "In Cold Blood" was released.
--- MUSIC FOR CHAMELEONS was published in 1980.
--- ONE CHRISTMAS was published in 1983.
--- Capote died August 25, 1984.
--- THREE BY TRUMAN CAPOTE was published in 1985.
--- ANSWERED PRAYERS: The Unfinished Novel was published in
1987.
ARTICLE
How
do you measure a life?
Most often, we assess a person's actions, because that's what
we see; we often don't know the private man or woman who lives
behind the public mask. Yet the two can be very different,
and there is perhaps no better illustration of this than Truman
Capote.
In public, Truman Capote was outrageous. He offended and insulted
people, and remarked that Jack Kerouac's work "isn't writing
at all; it's typing." He was a social climber, a back stabber,
and his behavior was frequently offensive if not downright
disgusting.
On the surface, he did not appear to be the kind of person
you would bring home to meet your family.
He was also a writer of uncommon grace and sensitivity. His
words whirl and twirl along the pages, spinning unforgettable
images of people and places.
Consider the opening paragraphs of THE GRASS HARP:
"When was it that first I heard of the grass harp? Long before
the autumn we lived in the China tree; an earlier autumn then;
and of course it was Dolly who told me, no one else would
have known to call it that, a grass harp.
Below the hill grows a field of high Indian grass that changes
color with the seasons: go to see it in the fall, scarlet
shadows like firelight breeze over it and the autumn winds
strum on its dry leaves sighing human music, a harp of voices.
Do you hear? That is the grass harp, always telling a story
--- it knows the stories of all the people on the hill, of
all the people who ever lived, and when we are dead it will
tell ours, too."
He wrote about the frail, fragile folk who live on the margins
of the world --- the perplexed Holly Golightly, the confused
Miss Sook, the lonely Collin Fenwick. He reminded
us always, through his novels and stories, that there are
strange people in the world, but that they must always be
treated with kindness and understanding.
This is a person who you would be proud to invite to Sunday
dinner.
He is perhaps best known for IN COLD BLOOD, the story of a
brutal murder in Holcomb, Kansas, and for BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S,
a novel about a young woman who is looking for a home. His
first novel, OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS, is the story of a
young man who is sent to live with a father he has never known.
A CHRISTMAS MEMORY is an autobiographical account of the years
he spent living with his aunts. THE GRASS HARP and MUSIC FOR
CHAMELEONS are collections of his short stories and essays.
To learn about the public Truman Capote, you have only to
turn to George Plimpton's oral history, TRUMAN CAPOTE: IN
WHICH VARIOUS FRIENDS, ENEMIES, ACQUAINTANCES AND DETRACTORS
RECALL HIS TURBULENT CAREER. Plimpton has collected the remembrances,
some pleasant, some not, of people who knew Capote at various
stages of his life. It's a fascinating book, but I would argue
that it only tells part of the story.
To understand the rest, you have to read his novels and stories
--- when you do, you will understand that the private man
was an altogether different person.
"One day," he once wrote, "I started writing, not knowing
that I had chained myself for life to a noble but merciless
master. When God hands you a gift, he also hands you a whip;
and the whip is intended solely for self-flagellation...I'm
here alone in my dark madness, all by myself with my deck
of cards --- and, of course, the whip God gave me."
Truman Capote was one of the great writers of the 20th Century.
To read him is to enter a strange, magical world filled with
memorable characters and fascinating places. And I suspect
that after you've spent some time in his world, you will wish
you had had the opportunity to bring him home to meet your
family.
--- Judith Handschuh
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