A Short Re-examination of Holly Golightly's Character in Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's

Is She Sinner or Saint?

By Ryan Borja, published Jan 17, 2006
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Rating: 2.8 of 5
Breakfast at Tiffany's, which is one of the easily-recognizable short novels written by Truman Capote, may be viewed as a vital work of fiction that needs to be re-examined and evaluated for its characterization of Holly Golightly.

Let us first frame what this story is about.

Truman Capote, one of America's literary masters, published this story in 1958 about a young naiveté girl from Texas who braved and traveled to New York City.

Ms. Golightly, a young carefree girl with dark and bruised past, dreamed and traveled to New York City to escape her sordid life. She was characterized by Capote as a person who is charming and naiveté yet deliberately flighty, promiscuous, and intensely preoccupied with herself.

In some respect, this literary work, which is a character sketch in form, failed to meet certain relevant evaluation criteria of this genre.

The first and most important criterion we will use is truthfulness. How realistic was Ms. Golightly realized in the novella. Is she plausible as a fictional character? A character must be plausible. This means that the character must be clear and easily comprehensible to the reader. Somehow though, Ms. Golightly's character as flighty then dismissive in another scene and then promiscuous in other. This characterization is not properly supported and explained because the motivation why she was so in the first place was not explained completely. What appears on the book is that anecdotes and random episodes in Ms. Golightly's life is hewn and sewed to fit into the character of Holly but unavoidably turned out to be incoherent.

Takeaways
  • One of Truman Capote's most influential literary works.
  • Breakfast at Tiffany�s is not Capote�s best but just a light-hearted novella
  • This novella, published in 1958, is about a young naivet� girl from Texas who went to New York City
Did You Know?
Did you know that Holly Golightly's characterization by Truman Capote was confused?
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Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
I agree, that was a terrible review.

Posted on 06/11/2008 at 11:06:56 PM

 
You seriously need a copy editor. Did you know that there is no such word as "badly"? How dare you intend to dissect a charachter from Capote without having knowledge of the English language, much less an intimate relationship with life that would allow you to imagine (key word here) someone having as tough of a time dealing with reality that she had to make it up? Duh. It's not tough. I could write the prequel. And it's not cruel. It's sad. Get a flippin' clue.

Posted on 05/10/2007 at 2:05:00 AM

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