Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

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Everyone remembers their first love. Some will end happily, while some will end with tragedy. In 1959, in the town of Holcomb, Kansas, a loving family is murdered in cold blood by two mystery killers. By the end of the book, it is revealed that Perry Smith, a man who very clearly has a mental disorder, and Dick Hickock were the culprits and sentenced to death. It took the author, Truman Capote, nearly four years to complete his investigation to find the truth and write the book. Nearing 60 years after the book was published, many critics have speculated if Capote told the whole truth, or if he was just trying to help the town sympathize with his new lover. In the novel “In Cold Blood,” Truman Capote changed events in the book he wrote to suit his lover Perry Smith, contrary to other beliefs that it was just a simple friendship that developed over the four year investigation. …show more content…

He prided himself on the fact that he didn’t use any recording devices in the following investigation due to “the reluctance and self-consciousness often associated with the use of the tape recorder,” (Henye, 84). He not use any recorders, which leaves many facts debatable with few witnesses. Many interviews were done inside the prison cells, which aren’t exactly highly populated. It is no surprise that after Truman and Perry spent hours alone, interviewing, in a small cell for four years, they fell in

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