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In Cold Blood By Truman Capote Essay

, Research Paper


On In the book In Cold Blood, Truman Capote engages in an analysis of both the


murderers and the people who surrounded the Clutter family. Capote goes through


an intensive breakdown of the characters, clearly showing how each was affected


as an individual by the horrendous happenings of November 15, 1959. The Clutter


murders jolted the peaceful lives and future outcomes of the residents of


Holcomb County. Susan Kidwell, Nancy Clutter?s best friend, is affected in a


very unique way. From the beginning chapters we see how Nancy confides


everything with Susan. Susan has certain privilages that no one can come close


to having. Capote allows us to feel their closeness as in page 21 we are carried


into one of their many conversations where they exchange secrets and dreams.


This relationship explains Susan?s reaction when she finds her best friend


dead. When Nancy Ewalt shouts that Nancy?s dead, "Susan turn[s] on her.


?No, she isn?t. And don?t you say it. Don?t you dare" (Capote 60).


Her love for her friend does not allow her to realize that Nancy is really dead.


She is so overwhelmed with the circumstances that she cannot attend school until


a couple of days after the funeral (94). Mr. Ewalt clearly states, "Susan


never has got over it. Never will, ask me" (60). This fact is clear to the


reader when in the last section of the book, Al Dewey finds Susan by the graves


and she says, "I?m really happy. . . Nancy and I planned to go to college


together. We were going to be roommates. I think about it sometimes. Suddenly,


when I?m very happy, I think of all the plans we made" (349). Although


she experienced a tragic event, Susan is able to think back on Nancy and find


happiness in the thoughts of the times they spent together. The truth is that


she never gets over it because Dewey asks about her, but she cannot go on


without including her dear friend in the picture. Bobby Rupp plays a major role


in the life of Nancy Clutter. We can see how this is true because of all the


pictures that Nancy has of "Bobby caught in a dozen actions . . ."


(56). Bobby feels the same way toward Nancy. He too, like Susan, is unable to


attend school for a while. It is very shocking to him to loose Nancy, not only


because he has never lost anybody dear to his heart, but bacuse he claims to


have loved her (94). A month and a couple of weeks later after the murders, near


Christmas time, he still remembers her. ". . . At mealtimes he [is] told


again and again that he must plese eat. No one comprehend[s] that really he [is]


ill, that grief [has] made him so, that grief [has] drawn a circle around him he


[cannot] escape from and others [cannot] enter; except possibly Sue" (203).


For a short while, Susan becomes his only companion, for only she can understand


who and what Nancy means to him. After a while though, "they [are] forcing


each other to mourn and remember what in fact they [want] to forget" (204).


So after that realization, both trying to get on with their lives, stop seeing


each other. This helps Bobby grow and years later, leave town and get married


(342). Alvin Dewey was affected in both his professional and family life. As


soon as he is given the case, he makes it a "personal preposition"


(80). The attitude taken upon the case possesses him. It gets to the point that


"his mind automatically reject[s] problems not concerned with the Clutter


case" (148). People ask him if he knows what he is making of himself and he


replies by saying "that [the Clutter case]?s all he thinks about"


(148). He has become terribly "absent-minded." His family life becomes


totally controlled by the case. When the phone rings constantly, he promises his


wife that he will disconnect it. The hope that he might get another clue though,


leads him not to disconnect it. He finds himself lying to his wife, smoking, not


getting enough sleep, lacking proper nutrition, and having to send his children


away to his parents-in-law?s house. We can again see the possessed Dewey when


Marie gathers enough courage to ask him if they?ll ever get back to being a


normal family. He tries to answer and ironiacally is interrupted by another


phone call (100-105). Even his family dreams are changed as fear consumes the


hearts of innocent victims. His wife lets him know that she does not wish to buy


the prairie field for fear of the same tragedy to occur to her family. On page


341, Capote shares with us that after everything has come to an end, although


"his" dream did not come true, they are happy in a nice house near the


city where all of his family feels safe. For a few months in the characters


lives, the world stops turning. They are affected in very serious ways. The


murders did in fact change their lives and the outcomes of their futures.


However, life goes on, and the characters reach the same conclusion. Therefore,


they too go on.


375


Capote, Truman. "In Cold Blood."

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