Available Formats
Summer Crossing
By (Author) Truman Capote
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Classics
1st September 2006
29th June 2006
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.54
Paperback
160
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 10mm
126g
Summer Crossing is the story of a 17-year-old girl who has been left in New York while her parents spend the summer in Europe. The novella was thought to have been abandoned by the then 20-year-old author in 1944, when he started to write the novel that would make his name, Other Voices, Other Rooms, but the manuscript is a completed work.
"Truman Capote is the most perfect writer of my generation.""
"-Norman Mailer
"From the Hardcover edition."
Truman Capote was born in New Orleans in 1924 and was raised in various parts of the south, his family spending winters in New Orleans and summers in Alabama and New Georgia. By the age of fourteen he had already started writing short stories, some of which were published. He left school when he was fifteen and subsequently worked for the New Yorker which provided his first - and last - regular job. Following his spell with the New Yorker, Capote spent two years on a Louisiana farm where he wrote Other Voices, Other Rooms (1948). He lived, at one time or another, in Greece, Italy, Africa and the West Indies, and travelled in Russia and the Orient. He is the author of many highly praised books, including A Tree of Night and Other Stories (1949), The Grass Harp (1951), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1958), In Cold Blood (1965), which immediately became the centre of a storm of controversy on its publication, Music for Chameleons (1980) and Answered Prayers (1986), all of which are published by Penguin. Truman Capote died in August 1984.