Sunday, April 17, 2011

A Christmas Memory, Issues

I would imagine that Capote and his cousin send the fruitcakes to people they hardly know because they wish to possibly make a few new friends, as well as to let those people realize that they exist, and that they are thought about. The two friends merely wish to be friendly.

Capote wishes that he could remain with his cousin forever; this is because he has lived with his friend for as long as he can remember, thus the two are best friends. The boy knows that wherever he may go next, that he’ll never have a friend so close as that he has at home right now.

What Capote means by this is that he desires never to be separated from his friend, until the day he dies, and goes up to heaven with her. He would rather go to heaven with her than go anywhere else, and the kites in this quote are used in symbolism of the unity of the two because they both gave each other kites for Christmas, knowing that each would be blissful with the other’s gift.

The true meaning of gift giving is expressing your feelings for someone, and sometimes people like to use large gifts instead of their words. This isn’t always good, as sometimes, the opposing party wishes to hear the words, for they are more meaningful. In short, gift giving is a form of expression of feelings for another individual.
Analyzing Literature

Capote uses the present tense to describe events twenty years old because he wishes to remember the event as if it just happened, and that makes him feel good inside.

“A Christmas Memory” is a reminiscence in that the author, Truman Capote, is attempting to remember his past, for he too spent most of his childhood in the care of relatives. One of these relatives, an elderly cousin named Sook Faulk, was his special friend, and thus he received the inspiration for this story; to remember his past, and most importantly, his best friend.

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