
Truman Capote spent several years in the 1950s and 1960s in Brooklyn
Heights, once telling a reporter: "It's the only place to
live in New York." George Plimpton writes that "a 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." Long out of print, Truman
Capote’s evocative essay on Brooklyn Heights 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, of antiques and dowagers, a garden overhung with
wisteria, and the famous Esplanade—all rendered in his deft
and stylish prose and with obvious affection for the neighborhood.
Originally commissioned for Holiday magazine in the late
1950s by John Knowles (later the author of A Separate Peace),
the essay remained one of his favorites—especially its surprise
ending.
A House on the Heights is the third in a series of
essays on New York City published by The Little Bookroom. It
follows Here is New York by E.B. White with an introduction
by Roger Angell, and Harpo Speaks…about New York by
Harpo Marx with an introduction by E.L. Doctorow. |