Killers In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

Words: 304
Pages: 2

Truman Capote, in his novel In Cold Blood (1965), suggests that the killers are more humane than what the murders had made them out to be to which the reader can sympathize with the said killers. Capote supports this suggestion by examining both killer’s lives before the murders and delves for the source of their mentality in which it takes the reader through a journey of self-hate, anger, tragedy, and the self-deprecating fixation on the American Dream. However, his main purpose in writing this is to shed a light on the killers without portraying them as animals, like the media/press had done and instead make them out as people. He creates a relationship with the readers who are captivated with the murder of an All-American upper-class family