
Fiction - paperback; Penguin Books; 160 pages; 1998.
Despite being a long time Truman Capote fan, Breakfast at Tiffany's was one of those books that I just never got around to reading. I've never seen the film either, although I cannot think of Audrey Hepburn without seeing her in my mind's eye as the fabulously glamorous Holly Golightly. When a character from a book becomes 'known' to you in this way, I think it's fair to describe that character - and indeed the book - as iconic.
Perhaps, in some small way, I did not want to read the book for fear of spoiling the illusion. I needn't have worried. Breakfast at Tiffany's is a gorgeous light read (I was going to say frivolous, but I don't think there is really anything frivolous about this book).
Holly Golightly, a young woman drifting through life as if it was one long holiday, is feisty and determined, if a little naive. Alone in New York City she blazes her way through the social scene, living it up in bars and holding parties in her east side apartment. But she unwittingly gets caught up in a Mafia plot and before you can say 'boo' she's in trouble with the law.
On the face of it, Breakfast at Tiffany's could be described as a fairly straightforward story about one girl's adventure in the big city. But I think that's too simplistic.
Written in 1958, it portrays a world in which women were invariably
best seen and
not heard, and totally reliant on men for money and worldly comforts.
And yet Capote has created a female character that is largely
independent and emotionally strong, although she's vulnerable too
(loneliness, depression and desperation are hinted at). While she might
be having a lot of fun, she's also on the run from a past that is
forever trying to catch up with her as she tries to find a place that makes her feel as happy as Tiffany's does.
All in all, this short novella is a joy to read. Capote's writing is typically rich and lyrical. He describes this woman in such a way that you get the sense he has moulded her on someone that intrigued him, that held some allure or had an aura of mysticism that left a deep impression.
My edition also contained three equally crafted, highly entertaining and unforgettable short stories - House of Flowers, A Diamond Guitar and the supremely moving and heart-felt A Christmas Memory - which demonstrate that Capote is not just a master of the novel.





