The elderly cousin thinks of this as heaven, and says that God and heaven must be like this. In a beautiful, hidden meadow, they fly the kites that day in the clear, winter sky, while eating the older cousin's Christmas oranges. Then they exchange their joyful presents to each other, the two kites, and Buddy's friend tells him that the kite he made is her favourite gift that year. Queenie gets a bone, as she does every year. His friend has gotten the somewhat better gifts of oranges and hand-knitted scarves. Buddy is extremely disappointed, having received the rather dismal gifts of old hand-me-downs and a subscription to a religious magazine. He has made her a kite, too.Ĭome Christmas morning, the two of them are up at the crack of dawn, anxious to open their presents. Buddy and the older cousin keep their gifts to each other a secret, and although Buddy knows that his friend desperately wishes she could afford to get him a bike, he assumes his friend has made him a kite, as she has every year. They spend the following days making decorations for the tree and presents for the relatives, Queenie, and each other. They manage to chop and carry home a large and beautiful tree, despite the arduousness of the trek. The next day, Buddy and his friend go to a faraway grove, which the elderly cousin has proclaimed the best place, by far, to chop down Christmas trees. She runs off to her room crying, but Buddy follows and comforts her with thoughts of Christmas rituals. This leads to the two of them becoming giddy drunk, and the older cousin being severely reprimanded by angry relatives for letting the younger cousin imbibe. This year, after the two have finished the elaborate four-day production of making fruitcakes, the elderly cousin decides to celebrate by finishing off the remaining whiskey in the bottle. They send the cakes to acquaintances they have met only once or twice, and to people they've never met at all, like President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Every year at Christmastime, Buddy and his friend collect pecans and buy other ingredients to make fruitcakes although set during Prohibition, this includes whiskey, which they buy from a scary-but ultimately friendly- "Indian" bootlegger named Haha Jones. The family is very poor, but Buddy looks forward to Christmas every year nevertheless, and he and his elderly cousin save their pennies for this occasion. Narrated by an unnamed, seven-year-old boy who is referred to as "Buddy" by his older cousin, "A Christmas Memory" is about the narrator's relationship with his older, unnamed, female cousin, to whom he refers throughout the story only as "my friend." (In later adaptations, she is called Sook.) Buddy and his cousin, who is eccentric and childlike, live in a house with other relatives-who are authoritarian and stern-and have a dog named Queenie. Now a holiday classic, "A Christmas Memory" has been broadcast, recorded, filmed, and staged multiple times, in award-winning productions. The evocative narrative focuses on country life, friendship, and the joy of giving during the Christmas season, and it also gently yet poignantly touches on loneliness and loss. But Capote later wrote a friend, ‘’I had an elderly cousin, the woman in my story ‘A Christmas Memory,’ who was a genius.” Nanny, whom everyone called Sook, was thought to be developmentally disabled. The woman was Nanny Faulk, elder sister of the household where Capote’s wayward parents deposited him as a young boy. The largely autobiographical story, which takes place in the 1930s, describes a period in the lives of the seven-year-old narrator and an elderly woman who is his distant cousin and best friend. It was issued in a stand-alone hardcover edition by Random House in 1966, and it has been published in many editions and anthologies since. Originally published in Mademoiselle magazine in December 1956, it was reprinted in The Selected Writings of Truman Capote in 1963. "A Christmas Memory" is a short story by Truman Capote.
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