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Rare story from iconic Alabama writer to be published for the first time

FILE - Author Truman Capote, shown in his apartment on July, 23, 1980. Capote's unfinished work “Another Day In Paradise,” was published for the first time this week, in The Strand Quarterly. (AP Photo/Nancy Kaye, File)
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AP
FILE - Author Truman Capote, shown in his apartment on July, 23, 1980. Capote's unfinished work “Another Day In Paradise,” was published for the first time this week, in The Strand Quarterly. (AP Photo/Nancy Kaye, File)

A Truman Capote story from early in his career will be published for the first time. "Another Day in Paradise" was written while the Monroeville, Alabama resident was living in Sicily in the 1950s. "Another Day" is a narrative of disillusion and entrapment. In the story, the American heiress Iris Greentree has used her inheritance to buy a villa in Sicily. She will end up betrayed by the local resident who persuaded her to invest her money. And she'll be too broke to sell the home and return to the U.S. The story appears in the new issue of The Strand Magazine.

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.

One story from Sicily, "Another Day In Paradise," is an unfinished work that appears in the new issue of The Strand Magazine. Written at a time of relative contentment for Capote, "Another Day" is a narrative of disillusion and entrapment: The middle-aged American heiress Iris Greentree has used her inheritance — a small one because her mother didn't trust her with money — to buy a villa in Sicily. She will end up betrayed by the local man who persuaded to invest her money, Signor Carlo Petruzzi, and too broke to sell the home and return to the U.S.

"The past had trained her to envision an affair from a futureless angle; at the most, she hoped such episodes would end in friendship. It was so humiliating that Carlo should have turned out not to be a friend. She'd trusted him to the extent of her capital: let him sell her the land, allowed him to build the villa, supply, at pirate prices, the native paraphernalia that furnished it," Capote wrote.

"He was an emotional crook and, beyond that, a common gangster who'd pocketed at least half the money supposedly spent on Belle Vista. All this she could forgive him — could, but didn't. The unforgivable aspect of the ghastly man's behavior was that it had destroyed the meaning of these lines in her journal: `I belong. At last, somewhere.'"

Much of Capote's fiction was set in New York or in the American South, but "Another Day in Paradise" has the easy pace, decorative language and cutting — sometimes cruel — humor of his best known work, and the themes of loneliness, fear and regret. Thomas Fahy, author of "Understanding Truman Capote," says that the author likely related to Iris Greentree's sense of displacement and alienation.

"He was constantly moving around as a child, from New Orleans to Alabama to New York to Connecticut," Fahy says. "You could see how his life became very lonely and isolated."

The Strand has published rare works by Ernest Hemingway, John Steinbeck and many others. Managing editor Andrew Gulli found the Capote story in the Library of Congress, inside an "old red- and gold-scrolled Florentine notebook," he writes on the Strand editorial page. The handwritten manuscript, worked in pencil, was at times so hard to make out that Gulli needed a transcriber to help prepare it for publication.

Fahy says that Capote's time in Sicily, where he remained for just over a year, left him with the kind of feelings many authors have when away from their native countries — a heightened sense of distance from home that likely helped inspire "Another in Paradise," and a heightened clarity. which he drew upon for "The Grass Harp" and its memories of his years in Monroeville, Alabama.

Capote biographer Gerard Clarke says that the author moved to Sicily in part because his partner, Jack Dunphy, wanted to live overseas, and because the strong American dollar made Italy more affordable than New York. Neither Clarke nor Fahy could cite a specific real-life model for Iris Greentree, but Capote does refer to a possible inspiration — the aunt of a boy who delivers ice — in his essay "Fontana Vecchia," written in the early 1950s.

"Blond, witty, the ice boy is a scholarly-looking child of eleven. He has a beautiful young aunt, one of the most attractive girls I have ever known, and I often talk to him about her," Capote writes. "Why, I wanted to know, does A., the aunt, have no beau? Why is she all alone, never at the dances or the Sunday promenades? The ice boy says it is because his aunt has no use for the local men, that she is very unhappy and longs only to go to America."

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