In Cold Blood Truman Capote Nonfiction

Words: 520
Pages: 3

In Cold Blood made a large impact on nonfiction as a genre. The novel was written by Truman Capote and published in 1966. It was about the two criminals who murdered four members of a family in Holcomb, Kansas in 1959. Capote used many different writing techniques in the novel to set a unique tone for the readers. Some of his writing styles included imagery, diction, syntax, and characterization. Through Capote uncommon form of creating the novel, it categorized it as creative nonfiction. Creative nonfiction is a form of nonfiction, except it adds fiction to the facts of the story. Capote used very detailed information about the criminals, Perry and Dick, in the novel. This shows the reader that Capote had a strong relationship with the criminals of In Cold Blood. This is one way that the reader can know that his form of writing is creative nonfiction, because creative nonfiction often establishes a relationship with the characters. Creative nonfiction also allows the readers to connect to what the author is writing about due to the information given about the characters. Capote’s use of description …show more content…
His novel was considered creative nonfiction because it created relationships and connections with the criminals of the case and the readers of the novel. Some people found In Cold Blood to be inspiring because it was different than most nonfiction, while others found it unreliable since it focused on the murderers and did not possess many facts about the murder itself. Capote’s novel also showed great bias because of the relationship he had with the criminals, particularly Perry. Bias was built in the novel by the extensive information that was written pertaining Perry and Dick’s lives. Despite the fact that some individuals were opposed to Capote’s form of writing, it still founded a unique form a nonfiction