Comment: I've decided to read this book because of the challenge I'm participating in through one of my GR groups. I had it in the shelf already for it was included in a book collection I've got more than a decade ago, as long as I purchased a certain magazine.
Truman Capote saw the news about a murder in the small town of Holcomb and decided to investigate. Following that, he wrote this book, a fictionalized narrative on the events that led to and that happened during the murders. It also presents a character study on what went through the mind of the main individuals and what might have caused the killers to act and the prosecution to reunite the evidence to ask for the death penalty.
This isn't a big book but in spite of this and of knowing it was one of the author's most famous books (I also knew about Breakfast at Tiffany's), I had not had the urge to try it before now. The challenge I'm doing was a good reason and the fact it wasn't big made the choice even quicker.
I have to say I was positively surprised by how much I liked it. No, it wasn't perfect for me because I can't forget that some passages are just speculation and that several details are clearly dismissive because this happened during the 60s and nowadays we have way more scientific and psychological tools which would have explained or contextualized a lot of what caused the whole thing in a more professional manner. But in regards to how the author put everything into words... well, I already liked true crime fiction and now even more.
The writing captivated me from the beginning. I knew nothing about the case - I have not seen the movie - and was immediately taken by the setting up and the slow but methodical way the author presents the characters. I was easily drawn to the murdered family members, even with their flaws, and to how the chronological steps that took them into the place and moment of their death seemed to be described in such an atmospheric way.
I was even more amazed at myself for how easy it also was to understand the personalities and possible state of mind of the killers and how simple it might be to think about such people for their acts and conveniently ignore they are human. I think Capote did a great job writing things in such a way that it never is implied whatever he thinks of these guys, although it is understood that they did something unthinkable for money, and not much of it anyway.
I would have liked to see more about the psychology and the mental state of the killers during the trial but that was never a serious consideration, it seems. Still, the author conveyed interesting information and found a way for some of those facts to be read between the lines. These two committed a horrible crime for a ridiculous reason, and they have no excuse, but I liked it how the situation was presented and how, even in the middle of an unspeakable act, the background of the killers was a certainly important element to take into consideration.
This does read like a novel... in fact, there were times I forgot this wasn't so and I even wondered if the cops would catch the guys or not or if they did, would they link them to the case? This is how well achieved the writing was to me. Also, how easy, perhaps, it would be to solve the case with contemporary technology... there was one or two moments in which convenience and coincidence seemed to be at work too...










