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Emotional Themes In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood

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On November 15, 1959, in a small town in the Southwest called Holcomb, a family’s life was abruptly ended. Four innocent people were Savagely murdered, without any clue or motive. After the fact, Truman Capote himself traveled to this town as a journalist, to reconstruct the murder and investigation through his captivating work. A truly influential work, responsible for creating the nonfiction genre. This groundbreaking work, In Cold Blood, serves as a poignant insight into the anatomy of a murder, and the nature of American violence. Through his use of rhetorical strategies, such as foreshadowing and effective use of pathos and imagery, he successfully generated suspense and empathy, reverberating the central theme of the book. Throughout part I of his alluring novel, Capote continually foreshadowed the events that are to come. Combined with the reader’s knowledge of what has happened, a unrest, suspenseful feeling consumes the reader. Capote hints at the timeline of the murders by alluding to the fact that you are reading the events of the Clutters’ last day. “Then, touching the brim of his cap, he headed for home and the day’s work, unaware that it would be his last.” (13) This foreshadowing is also the same for Dick and Perry. Every time Capote switched narratives from the murdered to the murderers, he gives the criminals location, showing advancement in their journey to commit their sin, further igniting the suspense within the reader as their imminent arrival and

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