Brooklyn A personal memoir

Truman Capote, 1924-1984

Book - 2015

"In 2001, The Little Bookroom published Truman Capote's long-out-of-print homage to Brooklyn, A House in the Heights. In 2014, more than fifty years after they were taken, the original photographs commissioned to illustrate the piece have been discovered by the photographer's son. Also found among the negatives were portraits of Capote taken on that same day; none of the photos have ever been published. Now, in a new edition with a new title, Brooklyn : A Personal Memoir, with the lost photographs of David Attie, the words and images will be united for the first time. The images of Brooklyn provide a stunning and atmospheric visual portrait of the city in 1959--its building, shops, street life, lost moments-- a Brooklyn at on...ce strangely familiar yet largely vanished: horse-drawn wagons delivering produce to housewives, kids swimming in the East River and getting into mischief on the docks, dimly-lit bars, vintage signs, little girls jumping rope, bricklayers, barbers, neighborhood characters, all set against a backdrop of period architecture, that spectacular bridge, and the skyline of Manhattan. The essay itself brings to life the landscape that was for the author a world of grand homes and dimly recalled gentility, of mysterious warehouses and menacing street thugs, a garden overhung with wisteria, and the famous Promenade and waterfront--all rendered in his deft and stylish prose. Originally commissioned for Holiday magazine by John Knowles (later the author of A Separate Peace), the piece remained one of his favorites--especially its surprise ending. At the time, George Plimpton wrote that in the essay, Capote's 'love of history, gossip, character, and a skill at putting all this to words...brings Brooklyn Heights to life as vividly as any landscape Truman ever undertook to survey.' David Attie's photos enhance that landscape in a breathtaking way"--

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974.723/Capote
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2nd Floor 974.723/Capote Due May 9, 2024
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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This new edition of Capote's (Breakfast at Tiffany's) often-anthologized 1959 essay pairs the original text with an extensive set of rediscovered black-and-white photographs by David Attie. Capote was originally commissioned to write his admiration of Brooklyn, his home borough by choice, for Holiday magazine, with Attie assigned to follow the writer around his Brooklyn Heights neighborhood and home in the spring of 1958. Though a few of these images appeared in the magazine, the majority were lost for decades, only to be discovered recently by Attie's son and included here. The essay itself continues to stand on its own merits, Capote's meandering thinking and gorgeous prose preserve the waterfront architecture and eccentric locals he had come to love while his contemporaries praised Manhattan. The photos amp up the nostalgic beauty-men sitting in chairs outside "the civic league" office, the Romanesque Revival architecture of the now-gone Hotel Margaret, and a toddler and father watching a building being bulldozed, among them. The Brooklyn celebrated here is definitively, as the title promises, Capote's personal Brooklyn, and it might seem a far cry from other documentations of the borough in the 1950s. For fans of the writer or devotees of New York history, the celebration of this place, where, "in the greenless grime-gray, oases do occur, splendid contradictions," will be a valuable memento. B&w photos. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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