1. I read Truman Capote's book Breakfast at Tiffany's which is set in New York City during World War II. During this time 1 out of every 4 married women were working some kind of job, but not Holly Golightly. She instead profits of all the rich men in her life and that is how she makes her money. She spends her time with the elite class of people in the city who seem untouched or naïve by the realities of the war. However, Holly's younger brother Fred is fighting in the war which states the cause for her constant effort to save money, to support him when he returns home. The war times also impact the characters because Fred dies fighting for his country, sending Holly into major distress, and therefore complicating the plot dramatically. While Holly is in distress she tries to flea the country thinking she has nothing to live for, and that is when the narrator walks in and declares his love for her. If this …show more content…
Sympathetic The author uses details to add to the tone by replaying the unfortunate events that happened to Holly with herself as the victim, all the while omitting how she got herself in those sticky situations. Also for example, after she criticizes the narrator's writings without thinking about how it could potentially hurt him, we're soon introduced to Doc and he tells us the sad story of Holly and Fred's childhood. He excuses her actions bluntly with sad stories from her past. He gives us an idea of why she acts the way she does, through the details he presents to us. He also uses language as a way to get the tone across. He uses words that make Holly sound naïve and less educated, as a way to make you feel bad for her. For example she often gets confused with words in context and has odd (might call it hill-billy like) phrases. While reading this book you also have to take in the fact that the author claims for some of these events to actually have happened to him, so if he is writing about the girl he is in love with, he wouldn't paint a bad