Summary Of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

Words: 593
Pages: 3

In an excerpt from the opening of In Cold Blood, author Truman Capote starts out describing the small, Kansas village of Holcomb. The village seems almost ghost-like, abandoned and quiet with chipped and rusty buildings that show age and reflect the good times back in the day. Capote goes on to not only describe the “boring”, lonely side, but he then captures the more civilized side, mentioning the school where all the money goes and vaguely describing the people that live in this town. Capote demonstrates creative imagery among a journalistic view of diction throughout his book.
Capote uses substantial, creative imagery to paint the setting in readers’ minds. He describes the town of Holcomb as “a lonesome area that other Kansans call