In Cold Blood

by Truman Capote
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In Cold Blood
 
by
Truman Capote
 
published 2006 by Buccaneer Books
first published 1965
binding Hardcover
isbn 1568491522   (isbn13: 9781568491523)
description In Cold Blood was a groundbreaking work when released in 1966. With it, author Truman Capote contributed to a style of writing in which the re...more
date added
10-13-06



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 17191)



Amy
04/10/08

Read in April, 2008
After I read it, I looked up pictures of the Clutter family, and just stared for about five minutes. They endured what is probably everyone’s worst fear.

Having never heard anything of the Clutter murders prior to reading this book, the experience of reading it was intense, gripping, and suspenseful from beginning to end. Capote, with his impartial writing style, relayed facts and details in such a way as to give a complete character illustration of everyone involved: from each of the Clu...more
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Martine
bookshelves: crime, film, journalism-in-book-form, modern-fiction, non-fiction, north-american
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: people who like a good crime story with some lyricism in it
I don't know why I waited so long after seeing and liking Capote to read the book on which the film was partly based, but I'm glad I finally got around to it, as In Cold Blood is a magnificent read. The first ever true-crime novel (or 'non-fiction novel' as Capote himself called it), In Cold Blood tells the story of the quadruple murder that shook the Kansas community of Holcomb in 1959 and which Capote then spent six years investigating, talking to the bereaved villagers, t...more
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Denise
01/02/08

bookshelves: bookgroup, classics, made-into-movie
Read in November, 2002
Before I forget, did anyone else notice that the book was dedicated to Harper Lee?

So did the crime fit the punishment? Which character is worse? Perry who had an awful, disgusting childhood, was beaten, usually homeless, abused and treated like a "slave" but, according to him, killed 4 innocent people. Or Dick who had a standard childhood came from a good and strict family, played sports in high school, met the women of his dreams and married her. He didn't kill the family but he d...more
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Mona
06/15/08

bookshelves: history, mystery-suspense, nonfiction
Read in May, 2008
Holcomb, Kansas made national headlines on November 15, 1959, when the four members of the Clutter family were found bound and murdered in their farmhouse on the outskirts of the small town. Six years later, two ex-convicts, Richard ("Dick") Eugene Hickok and Perry Edward Smith were hanged for the murders. Capote's In Cold Blood is, mainly, the story of these two criminals.

Capote, who began researching the book soon after reading an article about the murders in 1959, traces...more
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Rebecca
Read in June, 2008
In Cold Blood is a book I wouldn't normally have chosen because a) I'm afraid of everything and this for sure sounded like a scary topic and b) it's a true crime story, which makes it even more frightening in my mind. However, I'm glad I read it. I learned a lot about Truman Capote (sorry, wasn't one of the billions who went to see the movie about him a few years back), including that he was the first true crime author. As a journalist, I also really liked seeing how he was able to put all of hi...more
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Gio
04/25/08

Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: those who would like to understand american violence and their own internalization of it
historically, this is a great book. personally, i found it boring and irritating. the way the author is heavily there, an obvious and heavy-handed shaper of the story, while being entirely obscured by his own fiction (he is not a character in the book) made me feel like someone was breathing hard in my ear the whole time i had the book in front of my eyes. and the romanticization of small-town american life felt nothing short of odious to me, because it inevitably sounds like romanticization of ...more
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Núria
10/01/07

bookshelves: 2006, owned
Read in March, 2006
'A sangre fría' no es un libro fácil de leer. Pide mucha paciencia y aún así puede que no te acabe de convencer. Todos conocemos la historia y no hay ninguna sorpresa. Sí, Truman Capote escribe muy bien, pero leer por leer sólo palabras bonitas, sin que la historia te cuente algo que sientas como cercano, no es una operación muy placentera y puede llegar a acabarte la paciencia. Yo me encontré en dos atascos considerables, pero no desistí y al final la recompensa ha sido incalculable. A...more
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Rolls
03/12/07

Read in October, 2006
recommends it for: Tru crime fans - get it?
Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood" is a highly disconcerting read. After painting an idyllic scene we'd expect from the Midwestern setting evil makes it's presence felt. The blood is chilled and the heart gripped as a result.

As everyone must know by now this is considered the first nonfiction novel. Meaning that all of the bare facts of this story actually took place. A family of four was indeed murdered in their home by two unknown assailants on 14 November 1959. What made this book ...more
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Schnaucl
bookshelves: book_club, borrowed, mystery_crime, non-fiction, read_2007
Read in November, 2007
It was certainly interesting to read what is widely regarded as the first novel in a genre, in this case, the first work of creative non-fiction.

It almost read like two novels. The first book was one novel with one style, the second half a separate novel with a style that differed from the first. The events in the first half were portrayed as objective fact, which made it somewhat difficult to reconcile with the second half of the book where the motivations and perpetrators of the acts we...more
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Jennifer
bookshelves: biography---modern
Read in July, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Nadia
11/28/07

bookshelves: recently-enjoyed
Read in November, 2007
I really enjoyed this book! The account of small town-life in Kansas, coupled with a shocking and weird murder, getting into the minds of Perry Smith disturbed me but gave me insight into the binary morality that exists in most societies. It challeneged my ideas about forgiveness, mercy, and justice. It's full of intricate and interesting people, but mostly, I observed and reflected upon the gap between real life and representation of reality: for example, the story a newspaper article and capti...more
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sandra
04/07/07

bookshelves: my-library
Read in April, 2006
Whoa. Unbelievable book. I had never read any Capote and was blown away by his style. His vocabulary is astounding. One example was the use of the word “hegira” in a sentence when he told of the murderers flight across country after committing their crime. It doesn’t just mean journey, rather it’s defined as Etymology: the Hegira, flight of Muhammad from Mecca in A.D. 622, from Medieval Latin, from Arabic hijrah, literally, flight
: a journey especially when undertaken to escape fro...more
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James Dawson
07/15/08

Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: anyone interested in reading "the classics"
This novel is a very finely written landmark in American literature. Capote writes fluidly, interestingly and it is a pleasant thing just to read his writing; he puts the reader at ease in a way. Before the publishing of this book, I doubt any person had dared to take a real-life murder and depict it in the form of a novel as Capote did; it would have been considered an insult perhaps and would've most likely been rejected by any publisher prospects.

However, Capote didn't just write In Cold...more
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Kate
02/04/08

bookshelves: book-club-reads, books-read--2008, classics, history, non-fiction, true-crime
Read in February, 2008
Having seen Capote and being a true crime buff, I thought I would be totally into In Cold Blood, but unfortunately, I was not.

The story revolved around the murders of the Clutter family in Kansas. The family was murdered by two of society's biggest losers (and I'm not talking in a reality TV sense), Dick Hickock and Perry Smith. These two drifters had heard about the Clutters from a prison cellmate and they had gone to collect on a safe that had supposedly been hidden in the ...more
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Ryan
01/22/08

Read in February, 2007
Wow. After hearing Capote's name for so long, but being somewhat nonplussed by the work I'd read of his--in The New Yorker, in short story collections--it was quite a shock to read this book. My impression of Capote prior to reading this was that he was just another New Yorker stylist with little substance. Not to say that I don't like stylist literature--in fact, I prefer authors that like to play occasional writerly tricks or who invert or look inward on the book as its being written. Howe...more
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Andy
06/24/07

Read in June, 2007
"In Cold Blood" is arguably one of the most well-known American books ever. Most people know the story whether they know the Clutter family by name or not.

Does it live up to the hype? I think if you read the book without knowing anything intimately related to the story (i.e. seen Capote, etc) then, for the most part, yes. Since this novel was the first of its kind upon its release in the early 60s it is easy to see why it has remained a mainstay of the required reading lists.

...more
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Shannon
Read in May, 2007
We've all heard quite a lot about (from?) Truman Capote these past 12 months. Between Philip Seymour Hoffman's Capote and what's-his-name's (Toby Jones') performance in Infamous, it's rather difficult to even crack the spine of this over-explicated text without hearing the faint cackle of new-york-high-society-types, or picturing Mr. Capote himself, before a crowd, holding the book (a tome, in my mental image) above his head, in that fantastic anecdote about the primacy of ...more