About this ebook
Holly Golightly knows that nothing bad can ever happen to you at Tiffany's. In this seductive, wistful masterpiece, Capote created a woman whose name has entered the American idiom and whose style is a part of the literary landscape—her poignancy, wit, and naïveté continue to charm.
This volume also includes three of Capote's best-known stories, “House of Flowers,” “A Diamond Guitar,” and “A Christmas Memory,” which the Saturday Review called “one of the most moving stories in our language.” It is a tale of two innocents—a small boy and the old woman who is his best friend—whose sweetness contains a hard, sharp kernel of truth.
Truman Capote
Truman Capote (1924-1984) es uno de los mejores escritores norteamericanos del siglo XX. Anagrama le ha dedicado una Biblioteca Truman Capote: Otras voces, otros ámbitos, Un árbol de noche, Desayuno en Tiffany’s, A sangre fría, Música para camaleones, Plegarias atendidas, El arpa de hierba, Retratos, Tres cuentos, Los perros ladran, Cuentos completos y Crucero de verano.
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Reviews for Breakfast at Tiffany's
2,431 ratings108 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Read for group discussion in one sitting. Iirc, the movie was gentler, sweeter - this is a bit shocking, and the girl is not naive waif, really. I admire the writing. Capote makes us like her even if the only thing she really has going for her is a particular kind of boyish or elfin beauty. But I don't think I really felt anything more than I did from the movie, years ago, or will remember it either. It's popular fiction, not literature, not of universal or timeless appeal.
I might read the short stories before I return it to the library, depending on whether discussion enables me to like it more. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Some of us of a certain age first came to know Truman Capote as a celebrity rather than an author. Back in the day, he was a frequent talk show guest, known largely for his outspoken comments, acerbic wit, high-profile feuds with other personalities, and flamboyant, over-the-top style. In time, a variety of addictions and personal demons rendered him a caricature of himself and ultimately led to his early demise. What a shame that was because the memory we were left with at the time was one of a rather silly man who was responsible for his own destruction. Fortunately, those memories faded with the years, but the legacy of the remarkable fiction Capote produced—including such notable works as Other Voices, Other Rooms and In Cold Blood—survives to remind us of what a talented writer he was.
In Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Capote produced a collection of four works of short fiction that do not share any unifying themes beyond being strong and affecting stories. For me, the clear standouts in the group are “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”, the title story that really is more of a novella in terms of its length, and “A Christmas Memory”. Both are superbly paced and well written, despite the nature of the tales they tell being drastically different. In the first, we spend a season in the New York City of the 1940s getting to know Holly Golightly, a quixotic young socialite with no apparent means and a shady past. As seen through the eyes of one of her neighbors, a would-be writer who may well be in love with her, we come to realize that beneath the external glamour, she is a fragile and troubled person. Despite its pervasive sadness, this is a deeply poignant tale and in Holly the author has created an iconic character for the ages.
The other gem in the collection is an elegiac story of the last Christmas a young seven-year-old boy spends with his sixty-something cousin. They are dirt poor, but the sweet and loving nature of their relationship makes them rich in other ways. The two are at opposite ends of their lives—the boy just beginning and the older woman not far from the end—but the bond they share sustains them and the memories they make form the foundation of the young man’s future essence. While nothing dramatic happens, this is one of the most touching and emotionally satisfying stories I have read. The other tales in the book—“House of Flowers” and “A Diamond Guitar”—are solid, but far slighter in both ambition and impact. There is nothing especially wrong with either, but they do suffer somewhat in comparison to the stronger entries. Overall, Breakfast at Tiffany’s is an excellent example of how splendid Capote’s writing could be. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Breakfast at Tiffany's surprised me. My brief initial impression when I began to read the story was 'wackadoodle'. Holly Golightly was very kooky. Paul, the narrator, I envisioned as a version of Truman Capote. This 1958 book would not be for everyone, but I came to love it. I am utterly charmed by it. I really do not recall the film at all, but the novel would not really translate to 1961 cinema without changes. Holly is a wild thing. She is a call girl of a different sort.
I thought I had not read Capote before, but there are three additional shorter stories in the book and one of them I recognized. It was quite memorable.
4 stories here, all excellent, with Breakfast the star of the show.
I have been thinking that there are a great number of classic works of 20th century fiction that I have never read. This made me want some more. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The novella Breakfast at Tiffany's and three short stories are in this collection. Each story deals with loneliness. None realize they feel lonely but will do what they must to "live." Each character is very relatable. Capote is a master storyteller. He is descriptive. I could see what he painted in words and feel what the characters felt.
I like Breakfast at Tiffany's. It is not the movie. It is a series of vignettes told through the eyes of Holly Golighty's neighbor. They fight but keep coming back to the other. The ending is open. Will she or won't she?
I enjoyed House of Flowers. Ottilie falls in love (or maybe lust) with Royal who returns her to a town like where she grew up. Her friends show up one day and offer her an out but will she take it?
My favorite of all Capote's stories is A Diamond Guitar. Mr. Shaeffer has been in prison most of his adult life when a new prisoner is brought in. He brings Mr. Shaeffer back to life. Mr. Shaeffer also learns a valuable lesson for not being lonely for a while.
In A Christmas Memory, Buddy and his elderly cousin get the ingredients together to make fruit cake for Christmas gifts for many people. Since there is extra whiskey left, the two of them celebrate being finished with the fruit cakes by finishing the whiskey. The adults of the household bring judgement and censure on them. Shortly after Buddy is sent to military school but carries on a correspondence with his cousin. Of course, she ages, and he knows before he is finally told. Again sad. I cried. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I wish I would have written a review right after I read this, but this was a truly terrible book. I've never seen the movie, so can't compare it to that, but basically this guy was obsessed with his slutty neighbor in the '60's. Get a life, dude.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Spring 2019 - audiobook;
I picked this one up on one of the many sales I picked up classic books from on Audible, and it's sat around a while waiting for me to push up the numbers into it. I have to admit I think I saw the movie for this book years and years and years ago, so long all I had going in was a sense of Hepburn like someone I passed on the street so long ago everything was foggy around the crisp vision of her beauty and more the taste of the soul of story than the remembrance of any story details.
Which, if we are being honest, is exactly how Holly Golightly would like to be remembered.
This short piece surprised me several times, never being quite what I expected it to be, and yet, just like 'Fred,' I felt myself drawn further and further and further into Holly's world. The garish obvious lies, and the brilliant lipstick smiles, and the way she never settled long enough to even emulate a butterfly really. How the stories about her, different in the hands of each person who interacted with her and longed after her, merged, mingled, and bounced off each other.
The ending was a touch sadder and darker than I truly expected, and I came out of it feeling more sad and wistful for the character than ever. It left me very much with a quasi-end of Lolita feeling, for a loss of innocence, taken too young, and left on the run from everything that had. I hope for Holly that she stays in the wind forever, and finally finds the thing she's looking for, because that is where she will be in my mind, all adored windswept hair and tapping cigarette and long false drawl. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Capote has a way of subtly drawing situations of sadness and loneliness that makes his characters so human. I loved the title story and “A Christmas Memory” most. I got chills several times while reading this. I am just knocking a half star off for the dated racial language, which made me cringe. Nonetheless, this was just a beautiful collection of Capote’s shorter works.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Bittersweet, I may have liked this more than the movie.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I don't know if it's the story or the fact that Michael C. Hall narrated it, but I really loved this one.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5"Breakfast at Tiffany's" is one of those stories that is such a classic that I can't recall anyone actually ever telling me about it; it has just been there in my greater awareness for decades. Last night I was sitting in my armchair, and noticed a vintage paperback copy of it on the floor next to me. I've never read it before, so I picked it up, and gave it a go in one sitting (it is only 85 pages long, and small pages at that).
ENERGETIC POIGNANCE
Immediately you can see why it is famous. It has the poignance and attention to emotional and energetic detail that you also find in a book like "Anna Karenina." "Perhaps my face explained she'd misconstrued, that I'd not wanted advice but congratulations: her mouth shifted from a town into a smile" (page 44). It's exchanges like this—where, if we were there, much of the interaction would be perceived subconsciously so that we don't even notice it happening—that bring a surreal clarity to the work.
AMERICAN PRINCESS ARCHETYPE
And then there's the content. Truman's homosexuality has not deterred from the way he has captured the iconic 20th century American princess. The racism and sexism condemns this story as a barbaric 20th century beast. Despite (maybe because of?) Capote's bigotry, he has captured a certain archetype that has significant cultural weight.
Our protagonist, Holly Golightly, is a whirlwind. You want her attention. Her world is under the compression of a sound engineer; she's so blasé about bringing you into the intimate folds of her life, and simultaneously it is as though nothing matters. Due to your infatuation, this leaves you desirous of her affections, which come like rain during climate change—unpredictable and inundating.
With a fleeting fondness, I recall the Holly Golightly's I've encountered, in all their intensity, spontaneity, and ephemerality. The evenings splitting a bottle of red wine at the retreat house in the Rockies followed by a two-person dance party. The mornings in the shower, washing each other's bodies. Holding hands while walking across the park, wondering at the perception of onlookers. Skinny dipping in the mountain streams. Kissing on the half-erected frame of a barn at sunset. Picking strawberries under a midnight full-moon. Watching the way eyes and hearts follow them across the dance floor. The pastels of dawn after an all-night conversation.
There's a timelessness to these experiences, not just because there's no knowing whether the next fling might be a decade or a lifetime away.
Setting aside our wistfulness and psychoses of longing, it seems there's still something essential about the human experience that Truman relates here, somehow tied into themes of innocent awe—of one another and the world.
FIRST PERSON PERSPECTIVE
And then there's the easygoing storytelling style Capote utilizes. Its him, telling his own story. He didn't try to tell the story from someone else's perspective, which may be why he was able to tell something so exceedingly relatable—there was no translation across identities necessary.
The story has a nostalgic feel to it, due to it being set in the past tense, a recollection of the iconic years of youth; "There is a brownstone in the East Seventies where, during the early years of the war, I had my first New York apartment" (page 9).
I recently picked up my dogeared copy of "The Rolling Stone Book of the Beats." Reading publications like Bookforum and the New Yorker, it's easy to see the continuous strand of slick New York hipster coming through. And, at the same time, I'm left wondering—was Capote a beatnik? Was this story frame-breaking for the 1950s? This is something I don't know. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This edition contains 3 stories plus the title story. “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” is memorable because the lead character, Holly Golightly, is so memorable. A free spirit with an almost elfish demeanor, her name, though acquired, is more unforgettable than the story itself. The story seemed almost unfinished in that style of so many stories written in the 1950’s.
The true gems of the book are 2 of the 3 shorter stories: “A Diamond Guitar” and “A Christmas Memory”, both magical and deeply satisfying. “A Diamond Guitar” reminds me in some ways of The Shawshank Redemption. Beautiful told in just the right among of descriptive detail, the reader can’t help but picture it in every sentence. I almost felt the chill of the stream as the two main characters cross it.
“A Christmas Memory” is my favorite of the 3. It is tender and beautiful, sentimental but not overly so. Again Capote has chosen each word carefully so as not to render the story too wordy or too sentimental. It’s the kind of story that will stay with you long after the book has been closed. It actually made me want to make and eat fruitcake, something I’ve never liked, because its importance to the story. I agree with the Saturday Review, which proclaimed it, “one of the most moving stories in our language.” Almost 70 years after it was first penned, it still retains that simple power. It’s not a knock-you-over-the-head kind of story, but more a drift-into-your-heart kind of story that once read will not be forgotten. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Having seen the film several times - most recently a couple of weeks ago - and never having read anything by Truman Capote, I determined to read the story. The skeleton of the narrative is in the Hollywood version, but it is different, too. In the book, Holly Golightly is more earthy, yet somehow just as glamorous. "I'm always top banana in the shock department." So she says to "Fred" her upstairs writer friend. She is not above swearing, or hurling a politically incorrect epithet.
In the early sixties, the film was shocking enough to hint at Holly's real character. Capote's wonderful writing gives her more depth, and gives the reader more sympathy for Fred's feelings toward her.
I enjoyed both versions. But have to think the story would make a very different film today. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A quick read about a quirky girl/woman named Holly Golightly. She manages to wrap just about every man she meets around her finger. The narrator lives downstairs from Holly and Joe Bell is the owner of the neighbourhood bar. The story is told from their point of view. Both of them love Holly but their love is returned only platonically. At one point Holly is arrested for passing messages between a mafia drug dealer who is in prison and his lawyer. She seems to be somewhat naive and that tends to get her into trouble. A great read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A perfect example of how different a film can feel from the book it’s based on. Hepburn’s performance and the alterations made for the screen gave Holly Golightly a pained aspect to her existence that doesn’t seem to so readily come across in the book. While I can admire it as a classic work and well-written, I found none of the characters likeable, not that I found them much better in the film, but they showed a few saving graces that seems lacking in the narrative.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5While I enjoyed the book and Capote's wonderful way with words, I found Breakfast at Tiffany's to be such a sad story. The Holly Golightly on the page is vastly different from the "Hollywood-ized" girl in the film. A classic, deservedly, and my book club found plenty to discuss (and disagree about) in spite of the story's brevity.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This one wasn’t quite what I was expecting but it was enjoyable enough. I have been told the movie is much better and different. That’s added to the list to watch. 4?
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I only read the main story (this particular edition comes with a few short stories) and when it ended I actually missed Holly and her friendship with Paul, even more so than after the movie. I encourage everyone who has seen the movie to read the book if they want to see a more flawed, and, as a result, a more real Holly. I honestly wanted to read this book again right after I read it but I have some other books that I really want to read. I only gave it 4 stars instead of 5 because I felt like it ended too soon, but I'm kind of conflicted about giving it that rating because maybe its brevity is part of Holly's characterization.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Although I love Truman Capote's style and especially his short stories, Breakfast at Tiffany's has never been on my radar. I haven't watched the film, either, of course. For some reason, knowing the subject matter, I knew this wouldn't be my cup of tea. I started reading it a few days ago, because of a group discussion, and the conclusion I came to was the same all along. The prose flows naturally, Holly Golightly is an interesting character with her ''joie de vivre'' attitude in life, and the narrator -called ''Fred'' by our heroine, is a voice of reason and sympathy. However, I still fail to see the appeal of the novella, as the plot is nothing special. Perhaps this is exactly why people are fascinated by it. Perhaps it is the way of simplicity with which Capote wants to pass his message to the reader. It is an entertaining story, but not something I would read again.
The three stories that are included in Breakfast at Tiffany's 50th anniversary edition are House of Flowers, A Diamond Guitar and the moving, beautiful A Christmas Memory. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A perennial favorite, I recently listened to the Audible edition narrated by Michael C. Hall, and was delighted to find that he brings as much heart and soul to Holly Golightly & Co as I find when reading it in print.
If you’ve only ever seen the film (which is a fantastic movie, IMHO), or you are entirely unacquainted with Holly, do yourself a favor a pick up this book. It’s a slim volume and won’t take much time at all to read, but I promise you won’t be disappointed. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I re-read this one while I was @ WLC and actually enjoyed it this time.
Listening to the audiobook. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Amazing. Seriously. Truman Capote does with words what Van Gogh does with paint. These are some of the most alive and breathing stories I have had the pleasure of reading. All of the stories, from the novella Breakfast at Tiffany's to the short story A Christmas Memory, are full of emotion and beauty and pain.
Maybe it's the Southern influence. I know these characters. I've met them and had Sunday dinner with them. They're all family.
Just amazing. Seriously. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is the first story I"ve read by Capote - I couldn't get through In Cold Blood, as much as I wanted to - and I love it. Wonderful language. Great characters. It is very similar and very different than the movie. I definitely like the book better.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A 100 pages vividly descriptive story of a certain sort of refined, young, nimble, adventurous, stand-alone lady: but no matter how its couched in the end this lady is Capote's ahead of time, perceptive, lively account of an independent-minded, ambitious & morally flexible woman that has become the norm among modern late-20th & 21st century young females in a sort of equality to males in the western world. An immensely enjoyable read - although already in some ways a 'period piece'. There are 3 additional Short Stories in this publication.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was surprisingly disappointing to me. Having never read Capote's work, but enjoying the movie, I decided to cross this one off my to-read list.
Capote was a talented writer, however, the subject matter in Breakfast at Tiffany's was just depressing to me. Holly Golightly is a wild, white-trash, country girl who has escaped to the big city, only to continue to spiral into drama and sadness. Her character is crude, self-centered, and vain. In today's world, she'd be a reality tv star. One could argue that she's also a pathological liar.
Big jump from the elegance and sensitivity that Audrey Hepburn naturally brought to the role. If a true-to-the-book movie was being made, I'd probably cast Lindsay Lohan instead.
In summary, it's a well-written but sad slice-of-life. Not what I imagined because of the movie. I probably would have enjoyed re-watching the movie more than reading this. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Everyone loves Holiday Golightly. Holly, as she is known to her friends, seems to appeal to all kinds of men and a certain kind of woman. This sassy and shallow teenager makes her way through a Manhattan existence surviving as a society girl, an "American Geisha" as Capote called his creation. She is eye candy to dangle on the arm of a wealthy gentleman so that he might buy her dinners in fancy restaurants, expensive gifts, and maybe, breakfast or two at Tiffany's. Holly Golightly wants to be taken seriously but she is seen as more of an unusual mystery than anything else.
Told from the point of view of her neighbor, a writer who befriends her and becomes enthralled with her (like everyone else), he wants to believe his relationship with her is different. He believes she isn't using him because he has nothing to offer...until she has nothing to offer him. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"One of the twentieth century's most gorgeously romantic fictions". That about sums it up. My version has three other short stories too, which are also gorgeous, but much smaller. 'A Christmas Memory" is the best, and although it's a bit like Joyce's 'Clay', it doesn't reach that story's level of tragedy - opting for neat closure instead.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Breakfast at Tiffany's is a wonderful read, but the other stories are also beautifully written. My favorite among them was A Christmas Memory. Bittersweet, but definitely worth reading.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I have never watched the movie "Breakfast at Tiffany's", which is apparently quite different from the novella. I did not like the character of Holly Golightly in this story--she is selfish and cruel, though I am not sure means to be those things, she also seems quite stupid. In any case, though, she is not really a nice person. Birdcage outstanding.
I preferred the three short stories in this volume more. I especially liked "A Christmas Memory". The happiness, sadness, and regret are all so real. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Disappointed in Breakfast at Tiffany's. I felt that Holly Golightly was too superficial and not at all appealing. No soul at all. The only time there was any depth was the description of her "marriage" at the age of 15. Of course I saw the movie first. Audrey Hepburn gave her character charm that didn't come through for me in the book. I read that Truman Capote hated the casting and would have preferred Marilyn Monroe. He was clearly going for a different mood. There was also some gratuitous racism that slipped into the novel, which surprised me. I didn't expect it from this author. The 3 short stories were actually much better in my opinion.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I think I may be one of the few in America who has never seen the movie version of "Breakfast at Tiffany's" so I really had no idea of what to expect with this book. One surprise for me, nobody actually ate breakfast at Tiffany's, who knew? I really enjoyed the story, which for me read like "The Great Gatsby" or "The Bell Jar." All three novels describe this wonderful, over-the-top time period where cultural excesses are fabulously described in detail. I loved the language and the style in which the book was written. Holly is such a charming and naive character who just seems to be careening toward disaster. I loved the energy that develops as you wonder what will happen next. Although the story is very short (80 pages), there is a lot of great writing packed into this novella. I am so glad I picked it up (and I generally hate classics). However, after this one, I've decided that maybe I do like "classics" from this time period after all.
As for the other short stories in this edition, I didn't really care for "House of Flowers" or "A Diamond Guitar". They were both very depressing without the energy of Breakfast at Tiffany's. The last story, A Christmas Memory" was better, but still a little dysphoric for my taste.
Book preview
Breakfast at Tiffany's - Truman Capote
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
I AM ALWAYS DRAWN BACK to places where I have lived, the houses and their neighborhoods. For instance, there is a brownstone in the East Seventies where, during the early years of the war, I had my first New York apartment. It was one room crowded with attic furniture, a sofa and fat chairs upholstered in that itchy, particular red velvet that one associates with hot days on a train. The walls were stucco, and a color rather like tobacco-spit. Everywhere, in the bathroom too, there were prints of Roman ruins freckled brown with age. The single window looked out on a fire escape. Even so, my spirits heightened whenever I felt in my pocket the key to this apartment; with all its gloom, it still was a place of my own, the first, and my books were there, and jars of pencils to sharpen, everything I needed, so I felt, to become the writer I wanted to be.
It never occurred to me in those days to write about Holly Golightly, and probably it would not now except for a conversation I had with Joe Bell that set the whole memory of her in motion again.
Holly Golightly had been a tenant in the old brownstone; she’d occupied the apartment below mine. As for Joe Bell, he ran a bar around the corner on Lexington Avenue; he still does. Both Holly and I used to go there six, seven times a day, not for a drink, not always, but to make telephone calls: during the war a private telephone was hard to come by. Moreover, Joe Bell was good about taking messages, which in Holly’s case was no small favor, for she had a tremendous many.
Of course this was a long time ago, and until last week I hadn’t seen Joe Bell in several years. Off and on we’d kept in touch, and occasionally I’d stopped by his bar when passing through the neighborhood; but actually we’d never been strong friends except in as much as we were both friends of Holly Golightly. Joe Bell hasn’t an easy nature, he admits it himself, he says it’s because he’s a bachelor and has a sour stomach. Anyone who knows him will tell you he’s a hard man to talk to. Impossible if you don’t share his fixations, of which Holly is one. Some others are: ice hockey, Weimaraner dogs, Our Gal Sunday (a soap serial he has listened to for fifteen years), and Gilbert and Sullivan—he claims to be related to one or the other, I can’t remember which.
And so when, late last Tuesday afternoon, the telephone rang and I heard Joe Bell here,
I knew it must be about Holly. He didn’t say so, just: Can you rattle right over here? It’s important,
and there was a croak of excitement in his froggy voice.
I took a taxi in a downpour of October rain, and on my way I even thought she might be there, that I would see Holly again.
But there was no one on the premises except the proprietor. Joe Bell’s is a quiet place compared to most Lexington Avenue bars. It boasts neither neon nor television. Two old mirrors reflect the weather from the streets; and behind the bar, in a niche surrounded by photographs of ice-hockey stars, there is always a large bowl of fresh flowers that Joe Bell himself arranges with matronly care. That is what he was doing when I came in.
Naturally,
he said, rooting a gladiola deep into the bowl, naturally I wouldn’t have got you over here if it wasn’t I wanted your opinion. It’s peculiar. A very peculiar thing has happened.
You heard from Holly?
He fingered a leaf, as though uncertain of how to answer. A small man with a fine head of coarse white hair, he has a bony, sloping face better suited to someone far taller; his complexion seems permanently sunburned: now it grew even redder. I can’t say exactly heard from her. I mean, I don’t know. That’s why I want your opinion. Let me build you a drink. Something new. They call it a White Angel,
he said, mixing one-half vodka, one-half gin, no vermouth. While I drank the result, Joe Bell stood sucking on a Tums and turning over in his mind what he had to tell me. Then: You recall a certain Mr. I. Y. Yunioshi? A gentleman from Japan.
From California,
I said, recalling Mr. Yunioshi perfectly. He’s a photographer on one of the picture magazines, and when I knew him he lived in the studio apartment on the top floor of the brownstone.
Don’t go mixing me up. All I’m asking, you know who I mean? Okay. So last night who comes waltzing in here but this selfsame Mr. I. Y. Yunioshi. I haven’t seen him, I guess it’s over two years. And where do you think he’s been those two years?
Africa.
Joe Bell stopped crunching on his Tums, his eyes narrowed. So how did you know?
Read it in Winchell.
Which I had, as a matter of fact.
He rang open his cash register, and produced a manila envelope. Well, see did you read this in Winchell.
In the envelope were three photographs, more or less the same, though taken from different angles: a tall delicate Negro man wearing a calico skirt and with a shy, yet vain smile, displaying in his hands an odd wood sculpture, an elongated carving of a head, a girl’s, her hair sleek and short as a young man’s, her smooth wood eyes too large and tilted in the tapering face, her mouth wide, overdrawn, not unlike clown-lips. On a glance it resembled most primitive carving; and then it didn’t, for here was the spit-image of Holly Golightly, at least as much of a likeness as a dark still thing could be.
Now what do you make of that?
said Joe Bell, satisfied with my puzzlement.
It looks like her.
Listen, boy,
and he slapped his hand on the bar, "it is her. Sure as I’m a man fit to wear britches. The little Jap knew it was her the minute he saw her."
He saw her? In Africa?
Well. Just the statue there. But it comes to the same thing. Read the facts for yourself,
he said, turning over one of the photographs. On the reverse was written: Wood Carving, S Tribe, Tococul, East Anglia, Christmas Day, 1956.
He said, Here’s what the Jap says,
and the story was this: On Christmas day Mr. Yunioshi had passed with his camera through Tococul, a village in the tangles of nowhere and of no interest, merely a congregation of mud huts with monkeys in the yards and buzzards on the roofs. He’d decided to move on when he saw suddenly a Negro squatting in a doorway carving monkeys on a walking stick. Mr. Yunioshi was impressed and asked to see more of his work. Whereupon he was shown the carving of the girl’s head: and felt, so he told Joe Bell, as if he were falling in a dream. But when he offered to buy it the Negro cupped his private parts in his hand (apparently a tender gesture, comparable to tapping one’s heart) and said no. A pound of salt and ten dollars, a wristwatch and two pounds of salt and twenty dollars, nothing swayed him. Mr. Yunioshi was in all events determined to learn how the carving came to be made. It cost him his salt and his watch, and the incident was conveyed in African and pig-English and finger-talk. But it would seem that in the spring of that year a party of three white persons had appeared out of the brush riding horseback. A young woman and two men. The men, both red-eyed with fever, were forced for several weeks to stay shut and shivering in an isolated hut, while the young woman, having presently taken a fancy to the woodcarver, shared the woodcarver’s mat.
I don’t credit that part,
Joe Bell said squeamishly. I know she had her ways, but I don’t think she’d be up to anything as much as that.
And then?
Then nothing,
he shrugged. By and by she went like she come, rode away on a horse.
Alone, or with the two men?
Joe Bell blinked. With the two men, I guess. Now the Jap, he asked about her up and down the country. But nobody else had ever seen her.
Then it was as if he could feel my own sense of letdown transmitting itself to him, and he wanted no part of it. "One thing you got to admit, it’s the only definite news in I don’t know how many—he counted on his fingers: there weren’t enough—
years. All I hope, I hope she’s rich. She must be rich. You got to be rich to go mucking around in Africa."
She’s probably never set foot in Africa,
I said, believing it; yet I could see her there, it was somewhere she would have gone. And the carved head: I looked at the photographs again.
You know so much, where is she?
Dead. Or in a crazy house. Or married. I think she’s married and quieted down and maybe right in this very city.
He considered a moment. No,
he said, and shook his head. I’ll tell you why. If she was in this city I’d have seen her. You take a man that likes to walk, a man like me, a man’s been walking in the streets going on ten or twelve years, and all those years he’s got his eye out for one person, and nobody’s ever her, don’t it stand to reason she’s not there? I see pieces of her all the time, a flat little bottom, any skinny girl that walks fast and straight—
He paused, as though too aware of how intently I was looking at him. You think I’m round the bend?
It’s just that I didn’t know you’d been in love with her. Not like that.
I was sorry I’d said it; it disconcerted him. He scooped up the photographs and put them back in their envelope. I looked at my watch. I hadn’t any place to go, but I thought it was better to leave.
Hold on,
he said, gripping my wrist. Sure I loved her. But it wasn’t that I wanted to touch her.
And he added, without smiling: Not that I don’t think about that side of things. Even at my age, and I’ll be sixty-seven January ten. It’s a peculiar fact—but, the older I grow, that side of things seems to be on my mind more and more. I don’t remember thinking about it so much even when I was a youngster and it’s every other minute. Maybe the older you grow and the less easy it is to put thought into action, maybe that’s why it gets all locked up in your head and becomes a burden. Whenever I read in the paper about an old man disgracing himself, I know it’s because of this burden. But
—he poured himself a jigger of whiskey and swallowed it neat—I’ll never disgrace myself. And I swear, it never crossed my mind about Holly. You can love somebody without it being like that. You keep them a stranger, a stranger who’s a friend.
Two men came into the bar, and it seemed the moment to leave. Joe Bell followed me to the door. He caught my wrist again. Do you believe it?
That you didn’t want to touch her?
I mean about Africa.
At that moment I couldn’t seem to remember the story, only the image of her riding away on a horse. Anyway, she’s gone.
Yeah,
he said, opening the door. Just gone.
Outside, the rain had stopped, there was only a mist of it in the air, so I turned the corner and walked along the street where the brownstone stands. It is a street with trees that in the summer make cool patterns on the pavement; but now the leaves were yellowed and mostly down, and the rain had made them slippery, they skidded underfoot. The brownstone is midway in the block, next to a church where a blue tower-clock tolls the hours. It has been sleeked up since my day; a smart black door has replaced the old frosted glass, and gray elegant shutters frame the windows. No one I remember still lives there except Madame Sapphia Spanella, a husky coloratura who every afternoon went roller-skating in Central Park. I know she’s still there because I went up the steps and looked at the mailboxes. It