January 22, 2006
Capote
Dolly said that when she was a girl she'd liked to wake up winter mornings and hear her father singing as he went about the house building fires; after he was old, after he'd died, she sometimes heard his songs in the field of Indian grass. Wind, Catherine said; and Dolly told her: But the wind is us--it gathers and remembers all our voices, then sends them talking and telling through the leaves and the fields--I've heard Papa clear as day.
From "The Grass Harp" by Truman Capote
Capote. Great movie. Go see it.
Posted by Amy at January 22, 2006 12:19 AM
Just passing through, but about, "Capote," I was reading the book, "Capote, A Biography." And although I'm not anti-gay by any means, I must confess, the Guy-Guy Love letters & the sex scenes were a bit much for me. Consequently, I gave up on reading it/finishing it.
"How graphic is the movie?"
Lisa from LifeOnProspectHill