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Analysis Of In Cold Blood By Truman Capote

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Hello, Ms. Kidkiller, I hope this email reaches you well. Recently, I just read two very promising manuscripts that have tons of potential to sell if they were to be published. The first manuscript is In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, a gripping story following two real-life serial killers before and after they murder the innocent Clutter family in Holcomb, Kanas. The manuscript’s contents are so vividly painted; it is nearly impossible to believe it isn’t the slightest bit fictitious.

Capote’s purpose was to craft journalism with a descriptive style, telling a tale not many people have heard of in a way not many people have read. The story is certainly not a light-hearted read due to its serious nature, and Capote does an excellent job of maintaining this brooding nature through tone. The tone remains grim all the way through, even in the beginning where Capote describes Holcomb post the Cluster murder: “those somber explosions that stimulated fire of mistrust in the glare of which many old neighbors viewed each other strangely, and as strangers” (Capote 5). By declaring the tone to be so solemn in the beginning, Capote sets up the reader for what they should expect and doesn’t drop those expectations for the whole story.

Another aspect that helped to further the story was the strong usage of diction. In scenes that need to pack a punch, Capote chooses his words carefully such as, “…and the photographs taken at the scene of the crime by a police photographer- twenty

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