I've been meaning to read this book for years, ever since I watched the film (and fell in love with it) with my mother as a small child, but it wasn't until I picked it up in an offer where it was part of a set of 10 classic film adaptations for £10 at 'The Book People' , that I've actually managed to read it. I've heard many things about the book throughout the years, the main thing being that it is a lot darker than the film and that Audrey Hepburn portrays Holly Golightly as a more frothy character then Capote intended and I guess this put me off the book slightly.
Told through the eyes of one of Holly's neighbours in a brownstone apartment block in New York, a young frustrated writer who is reliving the story of Holly and her disappearance years earlier in a conversation with a local bar owner who was also infatuated with the glamorous socialite. Holly is portrayed as a glamorous socialite with a devil-may-care attitude but develops as the narrator grows to know her into a young woman with upwardly mobile aspirations who rather than being used by the elder wealthy men who's attention (and money) she courts, is actually manipulating them in order to escape from her impoverished roots. Strikingly beautiful, Holly uses all her feminine charms to manipulate men to help her in her struggle to the top, by whatever means they can, either using their money or in the case of the narrator using him for friendship and protection when her world turns upside down. Regardless of her many friends and lovers, Holly is unable to form true relationships, mainly through her reluctance to rely on others, even avoiding naming her cat so that they don't become too close. However, one of the tragedies of the novel is that by the end of the book we can see that she holds people at length only to protect herself from getting hurt, when what she craves is unconditional love and acceptance, something that is easy to identify with.
The tone of the book, as mentioned earlier is quite dark and though a quick read (it is only 270 pages) you are drawn into the narrators and Holly's world, although it is hard to build the characters in your own mind, rather than relying on the cinematic version if you know it well. The book is very well written and deserves it's reputation as a classic, the tone of the novel helps to build the mysteriousness of Holly, the desperation of the narrator as he attempts to help Holly and later his confusion following her disappearance. Capotes text is rich and descriptive, allowing you to imagine yourself with the narrator as though you were part of his memories and his development of Holly from a slightly one-dimensional frothy character to a woman with a complicated past and emotions allows you to build a relationship with her similar to that of the narrators.
I enjoyed reading this book and I am looking forward to re-watching the film to look for parallels, although I fear that I will now find it lacking after reading the book.
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