Essay On Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

Words: 1718
Pages: 7

Can you control fate, who lives or who dies? Merriam-Webster defines murder as, “the crime of unlawfully killing a person.” It doesn’t take a lot of time to realize that murder is frowned upon in various cultures, but what give a person motives to kill someone intentionally? It depends, as stated, there are uncontrollable factor of the human mind. Emotions are pure thoughts with a punch of imagination; they will show the color of your aura light or dark. You cannot include a filter to block the way you react to certain thoughts. In Cold Blood by Truman Capote is about a gruesome murder that ruined the life of an entire family. Author Truman Capote built a book on the mentioned crime by gathering information, creating vivid descriptions and …show more content…
The thought that someone would write a novel about the Herbert Clutter family and their murderers is extremely peculiar. In the book Capote open his mind and take on the perspectives’ of the killers. It almost appears as Capote was trying to justify the murderer’s actions, by saying what if they had some sort of condition. How can you try to understand someone that killed an entire family for such ridiculously cheap objects? There’s just a feeling that urges you to think something is wrong with that picture. Many people like I did not feel any sympathy toward the killer. However, Capote was able to reach inside of his thoughts and look at the bigger picture. The truth is these men were ordinary humans who just made mistakes; Capote just expressed those thought and emphasized on it. I believe the media was just intrigued by the book, because it described the events that occurred when an individual life spirals into the wrong path, it had never been done before, it was something new! When In Cold Blood came out, it was popular because it actually happened, not because it was a book about death . In Cold Blood, was the realistic telenovela of the century! The book was like a episode, everyone was waiting for it, because everyone wanted to know how someone could do such a thing. The Clutter family was an ideal family. Country folks who were living their life like any normal family would. It made people wonder why; why would anyone want to commit such a tragic