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88 pages 2 hours read

Truman Capote

In Cold Blood

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1965

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Essay Topics

1.

Discuss the idea of In Cold Blood as a “non-fiction novel.” To what extent can it be read purely as literature (rather than as journalism), and what are the implications of reading it that way?

2.

The final scene in the novel—Dewey’s chance meeting with Sue Kidwell—is one Capote allegedly fabricated. Discuss the significance of this scene—or another fictional scene of your choosing—to the work as a whole. Is Capote justified in including it, despite branding his book as a work of nonfiction?

3.

Late in the novel, Capote describes Dick and Perry as “uncongenial but helpless Siamese twins” (366). How do you understand the relationship between Dick and Perry? What does each man get out of it, and why do they choose to stick together despite their differences?

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