preview

Literary Criticism Of In Cold Blood

Decent Essays

Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood is a retelling of the true account of two men slaughtering four members of a prosperous Kansas family on the night of November 15th, 1959. Capote’s factual story of the murders of the Clutter family, the arrest of two convicts, the trial and the convictions garnered widespread media attention and fame for Capote. However, In Cold Blood has been critically analyzed by both worlds of fiction writers as well as journalists on claims that the book is “immaculately factual” (Plimpton). In In Cold Blood, Truman Capote delivers a single cohesive narrative of a true account which is worthy of being considered an influential work in a new literary genre: “The Non-Fiction Novel” (Plimpton). Capote’s style creates a detached yet penetrating effect of the savage murder of an innocent family and is deemed too violent for young minds and hence banned in 1965. In spite of the criticism, the release of the novel popularized the genre of creative …show more content…

Up until the release of In Cold Blood, the non-fiction novel lived in the form of many guises. Spanning several centuries from the end of the sixteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century, several phases of documentary novel or the non-fiction novel had been evolving in the literary world (Wainwright 2). One of the formulations, “the metahistorical novel” took the historical accuracy of an event with no factual accuracy. Others were more autobiographical, namely: “the fictional autobiography” (Wainwright 2). With the advent of the release of Capote’s novel, In Cold Blood, a new style of writing emerged giving it the name: New Journalism. Capote’s drive to delve into the novel-length nonfiction had been a lifelong ambition. Having spent five years in Kansas researching the murders alongside the

Get Access