Holcomb, Kansas

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    "Out there" is the phrase used to describe Holcomb, Kansas in the story In Cold Blood by Truman Capote. Capote paints a picture of a small, run-down, and insignificant western town using imagery, careful attention to detail, and diction. Upon reading, readers are immediately transported to the prairie, where things will soon become far more eventful. Using imagery, Capote make the slow town of Holcomb more than a name. He sketches a mental picture starting from a distance and slowly working its

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    piece. The description of the setting allows the reader to visualise the town of, Holcomb Kansas, as if the reader had been a traveller just passing through. Capote states the village having, “hard blue skies” and “desert clear air” featuring “an aimless congregation of buildings”. Capote infuses the reader's mental image of Holcomb as being dull, lifeless, and unvarying. Capotes imagery in the beginning can leave Holcomb being pictured figuratively as if it were black and white.

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    Analysis Truman Capote, author of “In Cold Blood,” builds the setting of the small town of Holcomb, Kansas. His purpose is to emphasize that the town of Holcomb is a small town where no one comes and no one leaves. He includes these details to show the contrast between the town before and after the murders of the Clutter family to the reader. Capote begins to describe the setting by referring to Holcomb as a village, unknown to most people, even fellow Kansans. The effect of this is to highlight

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    See Them Alive 1.Grain elevators is a part of agriculture, and in the town of Holcomb it is the center of their community. Life revolves farmers and who puts in a sufficient, hard amount of work each day. In ancient Greece, temples were the center of their community. Civilization in Holcomb is orderly and traditional prior to the murders. 2.Capote takes you on a descriptive stroll through Holcomb, Kansas in 1959. Over the course of his description, he includes that agriculture and natural

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    from page three to seventy- four. To get the reader in the mood for murder, the book starts with a detailed description of the Kansas flatlands, and then the Clutter family is introduced. That morning, Mr. Clutter goes about his daily routine. The author switches over to two men for dramatic effect he does so to keep the novel interesting. Perry Smith in Olathe, Kansas and is waiting for Dick Hickock, his former cellmate, with whom Perry is supposed to pull off a "score" that night. Perry also infers

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    Truman Capote portrays his own specific, intricate view of Holcomb, Kansas, in the beginning statements of his novel, In Cold Blood. His dismal, melancholy outlook of the town is presented to the reader through carefully and intentionally placed rhetorical strategies and stylistic elements. Specifically, Capote describes the loneliness and haphazardness of Holcomb through the devices of word choice, imagery, and selection of detail, which come together to convey an overall feeling of isolation and

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    that depicts the life of Maya herself from the time she was eight to sixteen. The in-depth stories reveal the struggle and hardships she faced growing up. In Cold Blood by Truman Capote is a true account of the murders of the Clutter family in Holcomb, Kansas on November 15, 1959. The book gives a more thorough look at the details of the family and the killers, the book is written to take the events and elevate them into a story, enabling the event to transcend their specific historical moment. Capote

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    A “ramshackled” and “melancholy” town, Holcomb, Kansas is mysteriously portrayed by Truman Capote throughout this excerpt of In Cold Blood. Using vivid imagery,contrasting tone and elaborate syntax, Capote more than adequately portrays his detached view of Holcomb as well as setting the story up for a major shift. While writing In Cold Blood, Capote uses many forms of vivid imagery to describe Holcomb in different stages: the scenery, the people, and the buildings. The scenery is illustrated first

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    1. Holcomb, Kansas, appeared to Capote as the very embodiment of traditional American ideas. Discuss the importance of the setting in Holcomb. What does the novel reveal about the town? How does the gossip surrounding the crime reflect underlying truths about Holcomb and small town Kansas? Is the town a character or protagonist? The importance of the setting in Holcomb is because it seemed like the least likely place for something this horrible to happen, it claimed to be an egalitarian utopia full

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    This passage from “In Cold Blood” by Truman Capote, finds its importance in how it briefly describes the effects that a single event had on a small town in Kansas. Within this passage the reader can uncover the overarching theme of this passage. With the help of both the structure of this passage and the diction used throughout, one can easily recognize the recurring idea that a single event can change a town. In fact, Capote expresses how a single event can change the history of a town, and it's

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