Oops, double post. It’s under true crime as well.
The great In Cold Blood – by Truman Capote. On my top 10 list of favorite books.
A couple posts about Capote on my site:
In Cold Blood – the first 3 paragraphs (actually, that’s a link to another site. Not to be missed)
Haunting excerpt from In Cold Blood below.
Excerpt from In Cold Blood – by Truman Capote.
Dewey fitted a key into the front door of the Clutter house. Inside, the house was warm, for the heat had not been turned off, and the shiny-floored rooms, smelling of a lemon-scented polish, seemed only temporarily untenanted; it was as though today were Sunday and the family might at any moment return from church. The heirs, Mrs. English and Mrs. Jarchow, had removed a vanload of clothing and furniture, yet the atmosphere of a house still humanly inhabited had not thereby been diminished. In the parlor, a sheet of music, “Comin’ Thro’ the Rye”, stood open on the piano rack. In the hall, a sweat-stained gray Stetson hat – Herb’s – hung on a hat peg. Upstairs in Kenyon’s room, on a shelf above his bed, the lenses of the dead boy’s spectacles gleamed with reflected light.
The detective moved from room to room. He had toured the house many times; indeed, he went out there almost every day, and, in one sense, could be said to find these visits pleasurable, for the place, unlike his own home, or the sheriff’s office, with its hullaballoo, was peaceful. The telephones, their wires still severed, were silent. The great quiet of the prairies surrounded him. He could sit in Herb’s parlor rocking chair, and rock and think. A few of his conclusions were unshakable: he believed that the death of Herb Clutter had been the criminals’ main objective, the motive being a psychopathic hatred, or possibly a combination of hatred and thievery, and he believed that the commission of the murders had been a leisurely labor, with perhaps two or more hours elapsing between the entrance of the killers and their exit. (The coroner, Dr. Robert Fenton, reported an appreciable difference in the body temperatures of the victims, and, on this basis, theorized that the order of execution had been: Mrs. Clutter, Nancy, Kenyon, and Mr. Clutter.) Attendant upon these beliefs was his conviction that the family had known very well the persons who destroyed them.
During this visit Dewey paused at an upstairs window, his attention caught by something seen in the near distance – a scarecrow amid the wheat stubble. The scarecrow wore a man’s hunting cap and a dress of weather-faded flowered calico. (Surely an old dress of Bonnie Clutter’s?) Wind frolicked the skirt and made the scarecrow sway – make it seem a creature forlornly dancing in the cold December field. And Dewey was somehow reminded of Marie’s dream. One recent morning she had served him a bungled breakfast of sugared eggs and salted coffee, then blamed it all on “a silly dream” – but a dream the power of daylight had not dispersed. “It was so real, Alvin,” she said. “As real as this kitchen. That’s where I was. Here in the kitchen. I was cooking supper, and suddenly Bonnie walked through the door. She was wearing a blue angora sweater, and she looked so sweet and pretty. And I said, ‘Oh, Bonnie … Bonnie, dear … I haven’t seen you since that terrible thing happened.’ But she didn’t answer, only looked at me in that shy way of hers, and I didn’t know how to go on. Under the circumstances. So I said, ‘Honey, come see what I’m making Alvin for his supper. A pot of gumbo. With shrimp and fresh crabs. It’s just about ready. Come on, honey, have a taste.’ But she wouldn’t. She stayed by the door looking at me. And then – I don’t know how to tell you exactly, but she shut her eyes, she began to shake her head, very slowly, and wring her hands, very slowly, and to whimper, or whisper. I couldn’t understand what she was saying. But it broke my heart, I never felt so sorry for anyone, and I hugged her. I said, ‘Please, Bonnie! Oh don’t, darling, don’t! If ever anyone was prepared to go to God, it was you, Bonnie.’ But I couldn’t comfort her. She shook her head, and wrung her hands, and then I heard what she was saying. She was saying, ‘To be murdered. To be murdered. No. No. There’s nothing worse. Nothing worse than that. Nothing.'”



Ironically, just watched Capote last night… I think it provides a little insight into the sympathetic view that the book gives Perry Smith.
Capote was incredible. I am always saddened when I think of how a genius is trashed in their declining years.
ATN – yeah, when I read the Clarke biography – there were moments near the end where I felt (God forgive me): “Someone put this man out of his misery.”
Sheila,
What’s your take on the theory that To Kill a Mockingbird was either co-written or ghostwritten by Capote?
Don’t have a theory about it.
I first read In Cold Blood because of you, Sheila… one of those posts (possilby the Birthday post, I don’t quite remember), but I went out, bought the book and devoured it. Its a wonderful book…creepy, amazing, intense. A truly Great Book.
I need to re read that. Just reading the summary and editorial of the first 3 paragraphs made me hungry for that book. You know how books call to you? That one did, and so did “Cather in the Rye”.
I have to read that one again as well.
Alex – yeah, In Cold Blood is something I’ve gone back to a couple of times. It’s just so damn good!
I remember so well when Mitchell first read it – we were living together in Chicago – and I think he had read other stuff of Capote’s, novels, short stories – but of course with this one, Mitchell was like:
Uhm …. WHAT???????
I think I did the same thing.
It actually scared the poo out of me.
nobody ever thinks that maybe that was all she had to say. that maybe, nothing else like that happened to her.
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/culture/HarperLee/pickett.html
nobody ever thinks that maybe that was all she had to say. that maybe, nothing else like that ever happened to her.
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/culture/HarperLee/pickett.html
Actually, redclay, I think a lot of people feel that way.
..sheil..we were living on Ashland and i kept checking the lock at that back door off the kitchen..i was sooo fucking scared that someone was going to come in and kill us in our sleep!! AAARRRGGGGHHH…sooo brilliant!
Mitchell – hahahahaha Ahhh, Ashland. The apartment we never really moved into. hahaha
I love how, on occasion, when I say something that is totally bullshit, you will reply, “I am going to kill you in your sleep.”
hahahaha
Like: Mitchell! You are???? Please don’t!