Along with such classics as In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Truman Capote had a history of work left uncompleted and unpublished.
Capote, who died in 1984 shortly before his 60th birthday, spent much of his latter years struggling to write his planned Proustian masterpiece Answered Prayers, of which only excerpts were released. As a young man, he wrote a novel about a love affair between a socialite and a parking lot attendant that was published posthumously under the title Summer Crossing.
Shorter work, too, was sometimes set aside, including a piece released last week for the first time.
Capote was in his mid-20s and a rising star when he moved from New York City to Taormina, Sicily, in 1950 and settled in a scenic villa named Fontana Vecchia, once occupied by D.H. Lawrence. Acclaimed for his debut novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms, and for his eerie short story Miriam, Capote would describe the move to Europe as a needed escape from the American literary scene, which he likened to living inside a light bulb, and an ideal setting to get work done: He wrote the novel The Grass Harp in Sicily and worked on numerous short stories.
“I am so happy to be writing stories again — they are my great love,” he wrote to a friend.



