“THE CLEAR SHINE OF A WELL-POLISHED MIRROR”: FIRST EDITION OF LOCAL COLOR, INSCRIBED BY TRUMAN CAPOTE WITH 18 FULL-PAGE PHOTOGRAVURES BY CARTIER-BRESSON AND OTHERS
CAPOTE, Truman. Local Color. New York, Random House, 1950. Octavo, original black cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Capote’s first non-fiction book, inscribed, “For Jack Keating, Thank you for a most interesting morning, Truman Capote,” with 18 rich photogravure plates juxtaposed against Capote’s text, including images by Cartier-Bresson, Louis Faurer, Bill Brandt and others.
Norman Mailer once called Truman Capote “the most perfect writer of my generation.” In the nine essays collected in Local Color, Capote’s first non-fiction book, he first displays the creative shift from fiction to reportage that ultimately produced his masterpiece-In Cold Blood (1965). Written from 1946-50, in pieces Capote later described as “a written geography of my life,” Hollywood, New York, Brooklyn, Haiti, Europe, Ischia, Tangier, Spain and his native New Orleans are portrayed in the shimmering prose that became Capote’s legacy-a style that proves “extraordinarily straightforward, clean and cool… his early Local Color portraits… have the clear shine of a well-polished mirror” (New York Times). First edition, precedes limited edition published in England the same year. Containing essays previously appearing in the New Yorker and published here for the first time in book form.
Text and images fine, light edge-wear to near-fine book; slight edge-wear to near-fine dust jacket. A classic literary photobook, scarce inscribed.