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Diction And Imagery In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

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New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo, London, Sydney, even Rio de janeiro are exciting extravagant populous cities across the world filled with adventure and endless opportunity. Holcomb, Kansas is rightfully not mentioned in this group. This town east of the Colorado border is a stranger to even the Santa Fe Railroad that divides the community in half. Truman Capote expresses the “lonesome area” that is Holcomb in the introduction of In Cold Blood through diction and imagery. The diction Capote uses is vapid yet magnetic. He uses words such as “haphazard hamlet” and “unnamed, unshaded, unpaved” as attention grabbers. Capote entangles long, slow sentences with with alluring adjectives to keep the reader interested while still expressing the idea

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