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In Cold Blood Paperback – Bargain Price, February 1, 1994


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NATIONAL BESTSELLER • The most famous true crime novel of all time "chills the blood and exercises the intelligence" (The New York Review of Books)and haunted its author long after he finished writing it.

On November 15, 1959, in the small town of Holcomb, Kansas, four members of the Clutter family were savagely murdered by blasts from a shotgun held a few inches from their faces. There was no apparent motive for the crime, and there were almost no clues. 

In one of the first non-fiction novels ever written, Truman Capote reconstructs the murder and the investigation that led to the capture, trial, and execution of the killers, generating both mesmerizing suspense and astonishing empathy.
In Cold Blood is a work that transcends its moment, yielding poignant insights into the nature of American violence.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"Until one morning in mid-November of 1959, few Americans--in fact, few Kansans--had ever heard of Holcomb. Like the waters of the river, like the motorists on the highway, and like the yellow trains streaking down the Santa Fe tracks, drama, in the shape of exceptional happenings, had never stopped there." If all Truman Capote did was invent a new genre--journalism written with the language and structure of literature--this "nonfiction novel" about the brutal slaying of the Clutter family by two would-be robbers would be remembered as a trail-blazing experiment that has influenced countless writers. But Capote achieved more than that. He wrote a true masterpiece of creative nonfiction. The images of this tale continue to resonate in our minds: 16-year-old Nancy Clutter teaching a friend how to bake a cherry pie, Dick Hickock's black '49 Chevrolet sedan, Perry Smith's Gibson guitar and his dreams of gold in a tropical paradise--the blood on the walls and the final "thud-snap" of the rope-broken necks.

Review

"A masterpiece ... a spellbinding work." —Life

"A remarkable, tensely exciting, superbly written 'true account.' " —The New York Times

"The best documentary account of an American crime ever written ... The book chills the blood and exercises the intelligence ... harrowing." —The New York Review of Books

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage; 31972nd edition (February 1, 1994)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 343 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0679745580
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0679745587
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 1040L
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 9.3 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.21 x 0.73 x 7.99 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Truman Capote
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Truman Capote was born in New Orleans in 1925 and was raised in various parts of the south, his family spending winters in New Orleans and summers in Alabama and New Georgia. By the age of fourteen he had already started writing short stories, some of which were published. He left school when he was fifteen and subsequently worked for the New Yorker which provided his first - and last - regular job. Following his spell with the New Yorker, Capote spent two years on a Louisiana farm where he wrote Other Voices, Other Rooms (1948). He lived, at one time or another, in Greece, Italy, Africa and the West Indies, and travelled in Russia and the Orient. He is the author of many highly praised books, including A Tree of Night and Other Stories (1949), The Grass Harp (1951), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1958), In Cold Blood (1965), which immediately became the centre of a storm of controversy on its publication, Music for Chameleons (1980) and Answered Prayers (1986), all of which are published by Penguin. Truman Capote died in August 1984.

Photo by Jack Mitchell [CC BY-SA 4.0-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
22,828 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the writing style masterful and captivating. They also appreciate the well-rounded characters and interesting premise. Customers describe the emotion as sorrowful, tragic, gut wrenching, and dark. They describe the storyline as suspenseful, well researched, and well paced. Opinions are mixed on the plot complexity, pacing, factual content, and redundancy.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

489 customers mention "Writing style"460 positive29 negative

Customers find the writing style masterful, amazing, respectful, and effortless. They also appreciate the author's unique, magnificent, and clear prose. Customers also mention that the internal dialogue is haunting.

"...Both are extraordinary, especially for their time, in capturing the mood and poetry of a place in the middle of a true-life story of a horrific mass..." Read more

"...His writing style is so unique and magnificent and makes you want. To just dive into the book and live there. He's a magnificent person in this book...." Read more

"...The crime is disgusting. However the writing is excellent...." Read more

"...The telling is very respectful of the Clutter family; you learn of what remarkable people they were, even as they met their ends...." Read more

266 customers mention "Storyline"231 positive35 negative

Customers find the storyline chilling, remarkable, and masterful. They also say it engages and thrills the reader, making them mad, sad, and terrified. Readers also mention the effect is profound and eerie, with good use of special effects.

"...The effect is profound and eerie, since these pages are read with a foreknowledge of death not shared by the real-life characters on the page...." Read more

"...In summary, this is an excellent work of non fiction. The only hesitation I have in recommending this work is the hideous nature of the crime...." Read more

"...heavy hitter, and the actual facts made it that much more serious and engaging...." Read more

"...To this day, it remains the very best true crime book I’ve ever read. Most highly recommended" Read more

155 customers mention "Content"141 positive14 negative

Customers find the book very interesting, engrossing, and detailed. They say it's a great study into the psychology of the criminal mind. Readers also appreciate the new perspective and say it provides a better understanding of the legal system in Kansas during the 1960s.

"...In Cold Blood is intriguing and unlike most true crime books that I have read, because of the immense detail Truman Capote puts into the backstories..." Read more

"...as stunningly fresh as it once was, IN COLD BLOOD still packs a considerable punch and the craftsmanship still shines...." Read more

"...His research is impeccable, presented flawlessly, lushly, sweeping the reader away on waves of vibrant language...." Read more

"...Capote gave you a very sense of Life...." Read more

61 customers mention "Characterization"58 positive3 negative

Customers find the characterization in the book enjoyable and suspenseful.

"...status - factual reporting that reads like a novel, displaying the intimacy with its characters that is normally reserved for the so-called "..." Read more

"...To just dive into the book and live there. He's a magnificent person in this book...." Read more

"Well-rounded characters. Very well crafted report of an actual crime." Read more

"...Every character comes alive, and in the end one is left impressed by this true story, more than any crime novel...just as suspenseful as any crime..." Read more

27 customers mention "Emotion"27 positive0 negative

Customers find the book sorrorous beyond belief, with startling empathy. They also describe the subject as dark, devastating, and gut wrenching. Readers also appreciate the respect for the victims.

"...of IN COLD BLOOD: It is a violent, unflinching account, sorrowful beyond belief (and made even more so because it's true); but, in the hands of a..." Read more

"...is a blunt nature to describing the crimes and yet also an honest, emotional, respect for the victims. Capote gave you a very sense of Life...." Read more

"...The reader is horrified by the crime, and yet can feel sympathy for the murderers, once reading their family backgrounds...." Read more

"...The story itself made me mad, sad, and terrified ...." Read more

49 customers mention "Pacing"19 positive30 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it well paced and quick, while others say it starts out slow and drags.

"...It is a little slow at times (I wouldn't call it a 'page turner') - but that's not a complaint, as it was necessary (and also interesting) to..." Read more

"HAVE TO READ IF YOU LOVE CRIME! Very well written and finished the book fast. True story which makes the book ever better" Read more

"...This, make no mistake, is a novel. It starts slowly, but as you get past the first section the suspense builds...." Read more

"...I gave it four stars, because there were some slow points throughout the book, but not enough to prohibit me from recommending it...." Read more

43 customers mention "Plot complexity"14 positive29 negative

Customers are mixed about the plot complexity. Some mention that the book keeps them captivated through each page, and descriptive, but it never got boring. Others say that they didn't enjoy the intense details and lengthy background descriptions, which are agonizingly long, boring, and add almost nothing to the story. They also find the book spent too much time on what they felt was unnecessary, and that it's far too wordy and rambling. They say the book leaves them feeling lost among the pages, and there are many false steps.

"...first books of its kind, but I do believe that in some places it is too detailed and just drags on for many pages before it gets back to the point." Read more

"...The writing style was incredibly descriptive, but it never got boring...." Read more

"...and there are just so many false steps, so many places where the reader just feels the author struggling,..." Read more

"...However, that incredible detail is almost to a fault to me. So much extraneous detail, that I found myself getting bored and just wanting to get to..." Read more

21 customers mention "Factual content"11 positive10 negative

Customers are mixed about the factual content. Some mention that the book is engrossing, real, and accurate. They also appreciate the excellent reporting. However, some customers feel the book contains incessant redundancy and extraneous information.

"...There is a blunt nature to describing the crimes and yet also an honest, emotional, respect for the victims. Capote gave you a very sense of Life...." Read more

"So hard to follow the writers path, very disjointed. The writer goes on about useless facts instead of focusing on the murders." Read more

"...This is a breathtaking work: in its accurate research; in it style...." Read more

"...Also, there seemed to be quite a bit of incessant redundancy of facts, as though Capote had forgotten that he had added these facts earlier and just..." Read more

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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2009
When a book like IN COLD BLOOD reaches the level of being a classic, there has to be a reason. Consider the following two excerpts:

"The land is flat, and the views are awesomely extensive; horses, herds of cattle, a white cluster of grain elevators rising as gracefully as Greek temples are visible long before a traveler reaches them."

"Then, starting home, he walked toward the trees, and under them, leaving behind him the big sky, the whisper of wind voices in the wind-bent wheat." The former excerpt is from Capote's opening paragraph; the latter cointains his closing sentence. Both are extraordinary, especially for their time, in capturing the mood and poetry of a place in the middle of a true-life story of a horrific mass murder.

As is certainly well known, IN COLD BLOOD is Truman Capote's magazine-article-turned full-length-docu-novel about the murders of four members of the Clutter family in their Holcomb, Kansas, farmhouse in November 1959. The two killers, Dick Hickock and Perry Smith, were ultimately caught, tried, sentenced, and executed, factual matters that are still commonly known today thanks to two recent movies about Capote's life and his efforts to write the book. Even at its publication, IN COLD BLOOD was not a detective story in the traditional sense, since everyone already knew the perpetrators and the case's eventual disposition.

In an era when such incidents were reported either factually (newspaper style) or sensationally (crime magazine style), Truman Capote effectively created an entire new genre: journalism as art form. Writing with a level of descriptive detail about places and events that create a strong sense of immediacy in the reader's mind, he begins his story with a re-creation of the Clutter family's last day of life. The effect is profound and eerie, since these pages are read with a foreknowledge of death not shared by the real-life characters on the page. Capote builds his suspense masterfully, alternating between the movements of Hickock and Smith and those of the Clutters (husband and father Herbert, perennially sick wife and mother Bonnie, intelligent, tinkering son Kenyon, and All-American sweetheart daughter and town darling Nancy.

As he brings the two parties closer and closer together, Capote continues to fill in background on their respective lives. By the time his orchestrated characters have reached their mutual, bloody crescendo, the reader is intimately acquainted with them as individuals and their respective life stories. Thus, the author gives us individuals with whom we are intimate as characters in a novel, yet they are real people about whom he is reporting in a senseless, horrifying mass murder story. This is Capote's genius and the source of his book's classic status - factual reporting that reads like a novel, displaying the intimacy with its characters that is normally reserved for the so-called "omniscient author," the one who can hear, share, and express his or her characters' most private thoughts and motivations.

Capote's pacing and remarkable eye for detail never relent as the story moves from crime to investigation, arrest, and trial by jury. He maneuvered himself into a situation where he was privy to every detail of the police investigation; it is equally clear he had extended access to Hickock and Smith throughout their ordeal, up to and including their ultimate disposition. While it was doubtless a level of access no longer available to reporters or writers, Capote took maximum advantage of it in crafting his story. What comes out of it, surprisingly, is a tale of two socially maladjusted young men of above-average intelligence whose trial was of questionable fairness, particularly as regards the mental health of one of them (who was probably more criminally insane than scheming murderer). In one of the book's most telling moments, Capote recounts the reports that the court-appointed psychiatrist would have rendered had the judge (and Kansas state law at the time) allowed them to do so.

IN COLD BLOOD is truly a master work by an effete, East Coast reporter who beat the odds (and prejudices, no doubt) and entwined himself in his story and the lives of its actors to an unheard-of degree. The result was, and is, more than just a gripping account of a horrendous crime. It is a study in criminality: its victims, its effect on their families and community, its perpetrators and their families, even on the law enforcement personnel involved in the investigation. One can hardly imagine a more finely drawn study of a single crime and its all-too-human impact, presented in a form that remains to this day a page-turner in the very best sense of that phrase.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2022
Throughout this novel, it discusses the death penalty and the judicial system’s role in deciding the outcome of the trial. In Cold Blood, written by Truman Capote, illustrates how quickly a small town turned on each other in the mists of tragedy when they believed the murderer to be one of their own. The book follows the life and death of the Clutter family and the lifespan of Perry and Dick. Perry and Dick are both convicted felons, Capote illustrates their lives together after they were released from jail as well as flashbacks from times in their life before jail. Perry Smith and Dick Hickok were partners after jail despite the dramatic contrasts in their childhoods. Perry had a traumatic childhood, with 2 of his siblings dead before the time he turned 30. He also suffered from a motorcycle accident which disfigured the lower half of his body and caused him to become addicted to painkillers. Dick lived a somewhat normal childhood with 2 loving parents. The Clutter’s were a well-respected wealthy family in the small town of Holcomb, Kansas. On November 15, 1959, the Clutter family was killed with a shotgun held a few inches away from their face. Alvin Dewey, the lead detective on the case, struggled with finding a motive for their murders as there were almost no clues. This novel follows the Clutter family case with new clues and a possible motive coming to light. The title In Cold Blood tells the reader that the novel is going to be about a merciless killing that we later find out was driven by greed. Truman Capote won the O. Henry Memorial Short Story Prize twice for his short stories such as A Tree of Night and was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. In Cold Blood was Truman Capote’s only true crime novel, however, he wrote many other novels such as Other Voices, and Other Rooms. In Cold Blood was published in 1965. Truman Capote well illustrates how easy it is for people to become mistrusting and turn on each other. By the end of the novel the citizens of Holcomb as well as the individuals involved in the trial are on edge and are beginning not to trust each other. Capote creates a good hook and intrigues the reader by telling the reader from the start that the Clutter family is going to be killed. The reader will learn throughout the novel that people change and not everyone can be trusted no matter what you have gone through with that person. In Cold Blood is mainly for people ages 16+ because the details of the murder are not appropriate for children under that age. In Cold Blood is intriguing and unlike most true crime books that I have read, because of the immense detail Truman Capote puts into the backstories of all the characters including the other convicts and individuals Perry and Dick encounter in their travels. In Cold Blood is available on Amazon and at Barnes and Noble for prices ranging from $10.29-$16.95 depending on where the book is purchased.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2024
This book is by far my favorite book. It isn't my first book that I read by Truman poodie. I wrote a paper about him in junior high. Then again in high school, then again in college I became obsessed with him and his life. His writing style is so unique and magnificent and makes you want. To just dive into the book and live there. He's a magnificent person in this book. Basically, lets you into his imagination and how he views the world on how he views this killer with kindness and with humanity. He doesn't look at him like cold-blooded. Like the book says. I've always said if there's one famous person I can have to dinner. You know who it is. It would be truman He always puts on a great show. But I wonder what's behind those feelings. Well, maybe in the sky. He'll be my famous guest to dinner.
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Top reviews from other countries

Daniella Benedito
5.0 out of 5 stars Livro chegou antes do prazo, sem defeito é o que eu havia pedido.
Reviewed in Brazil on March 23, 2023
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Daniella Benedito
5.0 out of 5 stars Livro chegou antes do prazo, sem defeito é o que eu havia pedido.
Reviewed in Brazil on March 23, 2023
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jose maria cazorla gahete
5.0 out of 5 stars rapidez
Reviewed in Spain on December 22, 2022
todo correcto
Frida Vizcaino
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelentes condiciones
Reviewed in Mexico on June 8, 2020
Excelente libro, excelente material, lo compré de regalo de cumpleaños y le encantó
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Pradeep
5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic Crime story
Reviewed in India on June 23, 2019
I feel I'm the last person to have read this classic about a Kansas farmer and his family - who are viciously murdered by two crooks, a crime without apparent motive or clues - but I'm not surprised at all that this remains such a compelling journey, more that five decades later.

Capote  surveys the lives of the Clutter family, painting a vivid picture of the 1950’s Midwestern small town USA.

While the stunning farm is brought to life, the individual members are examined in details that never seem verbose. The patriarch, Herb Clutter, is especially depicted as it later turns out he is the most barbarically slaughtered of the victims.

 

Along the way, the sundry and colorful inhabitants of the village of Holcomb, the upheavals in the life of the idyllic farming community and the lives of the investigators - obstinately determined to solve the apparently unsolvable and what appears to be the perfect crime -  are examined in such a beautiful, yet considerate, flowing prose that I was bonded to the narrative till the last sentence.

But what sets this book apart is Capote's central analysis of the killers - Dick Hickock and Perry Smith. He deconstructs their lives in a fascinating arc, from their troubled childhood to the events leading up to the crime and their eventual capture and punishment. The parallel stories of the felons are intricately woven, alternating with the investigation and never once did I feel overwhelmed.

The ultimate result of the striking journalistic work by Capote (done with his childhood friend Harper Lee, as I later learned) and his fluent prose, is an unprecedented treatise on two dishonorable lives spinning out of control.

He makes you realize that they are, after all, very human too. The frightening realization is that with some twisted fate, any one of us could have been in their shoes.  Some may even sympathize with them, and probably that scandalized a lot of the conservative 1960s readership.

The book succeeds in questioning our belief in capital punishment; the relationship between mental illness & crime ; and the effect of childhood vicissitudes & parent-child relationships moulding a person's life choices.

A few details of this 'non-fiction novel’ have been questioned by critics, but this is a path breaking work of American crime writing and it makes me wonder why Capote wasn't awarded the Pulitzer for this, if not the Nobel Prize!

I'm sorry I let this masterpiece rot away on my shelf for so long. I'm not even a tad ashamed to proclaim that I'm in love with the literary genius of Truman Capote.
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Annie
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating and terrifying story
Reviewed in Australia on April 19, 2024
This is still one of the best true crime stories ever written. The prose is exceptional! The characters have depth. The crimes are heartbreaking. It was written at a time when it was considered bad form to dramatise non-fiction even though the research was thorough. If published today it would be considered a masterpiece of story-telling. The detail is extraordinary. I read one quote about existence over and over; and although I'm not usually a highlighter as I read, felt compelled to highlight the quote. The saddest stories are based on real life.