A Tree of Night and Other Stories explained

A Tree of Night and Other Stories
Author:Truman Capote
Country: United States
Language:English
Genre:Short story collection
Publisher:Random House
Release Date:1949
Media Type:Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages:209 pp
Oclc:705911

A Tree of Night and Other Stories is a short story collection by the American author Truman Capote published in early 1949. The title story, "A Tree of Night", was first published in Harper’s Bazaar in October 1945.[1]

Contents

The book contains eight short stories:

Themes

The horror stories in A Tree of Night and Other Stories involve recurring themes of isolation and emotional anxiety. The protagonists are not quite ready to grow up, whether they are adults or children. The adult characters are emotionally isolated and bear unresolved emotional conflicts from childhood. Overall the stories are noted for involving "sexual anxiety and dysfunction without solidly grounded detail."[2]

Publication history

Reception and critical analysis

A Tree of Night and Other Stories received mixed reviews upon its publication. It firmly established Capote as a "Southern" writer alongside contemporaries such as William Faulkner or Tennessee Williams. The book received praise for its "enthralling style" and "remarkable beauty of language," but also received criticism for characters who "lack substance."[3]

Helen Garson considers A Tree of Night and Other Stories to have undoubted appeal to readers and ranks it as one of Capote's top four works, alongside Other Voices, Other Rooms, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and In Cold Blood.[4]

Steven L. Vaughn comments that A Tree of Night and Other Stories proves to be consistent with Capote's earlier fiction, most notably Other Voices, Other Rooms, which he describes as dark and dreamlike.[5]

Sales of the book were approximately 6,750.[6]

References

Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. Clarke, Gerald. Capote: a Biography (1998) Carroll & Graff. p. 85
    2. Bercovitch, Sacvan The Cambridge History of American Literature: Prose Writing, 1940-1990 (1999), Cambridge University Press p. 161
    3. Stanton, Robert J. Truman Capote: A Primary and Secondary Bibliography (1980), G. K. Hall & Company. pp. 39&40
    4. Garson, Helen S. Truman Capote (1980) Ungar Publishing Co. p. 6
    5. Vaughn, Seven L. Encyclopedia of American Journalism (2008) Routledge. p. 79
    6. Clarke, Gerald. Capote: A Biography (1998) Carroll & Graff. p. 224