Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote
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Classics Club book 46 (1958) Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote FROM
AMAZON’S BOOK DESCRIPTION: “Holly Golightly knows that nothing bad can ever
happe...
1 day ago
7 comments:
That is a beautiful song Fram!
Yes..those old tank ships!I remember well my father worked withthose supertankers..
It was a bvit lonely he alwa6s said--not much on the land..
howver you maybe have another meaning of the photo Fram?
Wish you a great weekend from ,The Sunny Westcoast of Norway
i ment a bit lonely and always!wow my spelling is bad very bad..sorry!
A few words about your barn. I think I saw once a photo of your barn. This time a barn looks quiet big and very charming! And festive also.
A photo + a song + music + mood - nice harmony!
Yes, it is a beautiful song, Anita. Among the most beautiful, I think.
If the ship reminds you of your father and of his loneliness when he was at sea, that is what it means.
So, you have a beautiful song + a memory of your father. That is what the post is for you, and the two elements create a nice combination.
Thank you, as always, for coming to visit me here.
There have been a few photographs posted here of this barn, Kaya, and now it has two new coats of stain/paint to brighten its appearance. I like the barn best in the winter when the ground is snow-covered.
I only have a photograph and a song with this post because I have no words to offer, which is unusual for me. My mind has been blank, empty, drifting like a boat on an endless sea for nearly a complete day now. I cannot focus or think.
Thank you, for coming to visit me here. Your appearance is always a pleasant experience.
Fram essa é uma foto muito curiosa.
Essa música me faz lembrar de um filme que assisti bem curioso também.
Gostei da postagem!
Se cuida!
The photograph is of an ocean-going ship on Lake Superior, taken just east and a bit north from Duluth, Minnesota. I sometimes write about boarding a ship in the middle of North America, and not setting foot on land again until I am in Europe. This is how that could be done and how I will do it someday.
The song is from Ennio Morricone, and was part of the score written for the film, "Once Upon a Time in the West." I believe a woman performed this song with "wordless vocals" in the film. It is very dramatic, very haunting, I think.
I am pleased you like the post, Smareis. Thank you.
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