Breakfast at Tiffany's Section 13: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
'''Spanish Harlem''' - Area urbanized by the addition of brownstones and apartment buildings in the 1880's. Predominantly Hispanic, it is also referred to as East Harlem, found in New York City. | '''Spanish Harlem''' - Area urbanized by the addition of brownstones and apartment buildings in the 1880's. Predominantly Hispanic, it is also referred to as East Harlem, found in New York City. | ||
== Commentary == | == Commentary == | ||
The last section of the novella focuses on the narrator's last regrets concerning Holly. The gossip in the paper dies down and he goes through the months of winter hoping to hear from her. In the time that has passed since she left, a man named Quaintance Smith has moved into her old apartment. He receives far better treatment from Madame Spanella that Holly did. He hosts parties and has the occasional black eye, for which Spanella aids him with "filet mignon" (110). | |||
The novella ends with the narrator's hope that Holly has finally found a home, a venture in which her cat has been successful. He regrets most that he cannot reach Holly to tell her about the cat. He expresses that whether it be an "African hut or whatever," he hopes Holly "arrived somewhere [she] belonged" (111). | |||
== Study Questions == | == Study Questions == |
Revision as of 16:33, 19 March 2006
Summary
The narrator notices the decreasing mention of Holly in the news and finds himself longing to be with her once again. He reads in the headlines of a newspaper about Sally Tomato's death and how Holly is believed to be in Rio. Holly's "abandoned possessions" are sold, and a man name Quaintance Smith moves into her old apartment. Little is heard of from Holly, until the narrator receives a postcard in the spring. It appears she has met someone new and is looking for somewhere to live. He wishes he had an address in which to write Holly to tell her that he found her cat.
Notes
Rio - Rio de Janeiro, a state and a city in Southeastern Brazil.
Sing Sing - A prison in New York.
- brownstone-perfers to old brick apartment where Holly once lived.
Spanish Harlem - Area urbanized by the addition of brownstones and apartment buildings in the 1880's. Predominantly Hispanic, it is also referred to as East Harlem, found in New York City.
Commentary
The last section of the novella focuses on the narrator's last regrets concerning Holly. The gossip in the paper dies down and he goes through the months of winter hoping to hear from her. In the time that has passed since she left, a man named Quaintance Smith has moved into her old apartment. He receives far better treatment from Madame Spanella that Holly did. He hosts parties and has the occasional black eye, for which Spanella aids him with "filet mignon" (110).
The novella ends with the narrator's hope that Holly has finally found a home, a venture in which her cat has been successful. He regrets most that he cannot reach Holly to tell her about the cat. He expresses that whether it be an "African hut or whatever," he hopes Holly "arrived somewhere [she] belonged" (111).
Study Questions
1. What is the name of the new tenant in Holly's old apartment?
2. What happened to her belongings?
3. What is the one thing he wishes to tell Holly the most?
4. Who found Holly's cat?
5. How did Sally Tomato die?
6. What day did Sally Tomato die?
7. What does the narrator promise Holly?
8. Where did Sally Tomato die?
9. Where did Holly write from?
10. What does the narrator hope Holly will find?