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Kaban ng Hiyas
Congressional Library

ARK Logo

Kaban ng Hiyas
Congressional Library

Book Details

Book cover
Literary Works

The Southern Haunting of Truman Capote

Author

Marie Rudisill;James Coleman Simmons

Call Number

KH183726.AWJX 4428 1990

Accession Number

34323pl

PUBLICATION YEAR

2005

Keywords

Truman Capote, Southern literature, memoir, literary origins, Marie Rudisill

Book Summary

Like many Southern writers of the 1930s and 1940s, who as a group created the richest, most memorable body of regional literature in the history of American letters. Truman Capote eventually journeyed northward. As the years passed, Capote's moorings to his Southern past grew weaker and weaker and he deliberately cut himself off from the people and places that provided fodder for much of his early fiction. The Southern Haunting of Truman Capote is a thoughtful reflection on the literary origins of four of Capote's important early works - A Christmas Memory, The Grass Harp, Children on Their Birthdays and Other Voices, Other Rooms - in light of the boyhood experiences that inspired those four works. Marie Rudisill, a younger sister of Capote's mother and the only one of her nephew's companions to have known him well his whole life, was in touch with him for more than seventy years As early as the mid-1940s, Marie Rudisill realised that her nephew was destined for literary greatness. She began hoarding his letters, newspaper clippings, articles, personal mementoes - anything that might prove useful later as a record of his life. During their many telephone conversations, whenever Cap

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