"Breakfast at Tiffany's," a novel by Truman Capote, tells the fascinating story of young New Yorker Holly Golightly, who leads a seemingly glamorous life by wooing men and being lured by jewelry and parties. But behind her eccentric facade there are secrets and loneliness that she begins to share with the nameless first-person narrator. The novella explores themes such as longing, identity and the search for belonging in the vibrant metropolis of the 1950s.