Wednesday, October 31, 2012

from In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

 

 

"It was ideal apple-eating weather; the whitest sunlight descended from the purest sky, and an easterly wind rustled, without ripping loose, the last of the leaves on the Chinese elms. Autumns reward western Kansas for the evils that the remaining seasons impose: winter's rough Colorado winds and hip-high, sheep-slaughtering snows; the slushes and the strange land fogs of spring; and summer, when even crows seek the puny shade, and the tawny infinitude of wheatstalks bristle, blaze" (10-11).

Student Responses:

  1. In the quote provided above, Capote’s dazzling description of the Kansas plains in autumn juxtaposed with the bleak depiction of the conditions that the region exhibits during the other, less forgiving seasons unify to produce one of the most stunning passages in the novel. Though the author primarily strives to maintain an air of journalism when recounting the truth of the horrific events (and, in doing so, creates what could be described as a “nonfiction novel”), he often disperses poetic, almost lyrical details of the setting into the story, much of which reads as a newspaper article or an investigative report. The tactic of contrasting tone is one of Capote’s most appealing strategies in his attempt to craft a narrative from the ghastly real-life chronicle of the Clutter murders.

    Idyllic descriptions aside, my favorite passage is found on p. 79. Several close friends of the murdered family have cleaned the Clutter household, deeming it their “Christian duty” to purge the home of the family’s blood stained belongings. After accumulating all reminders of the Clutter’s gruesome fate, the troupe transports the relics to an open field on the property of River Valley Farm. Dousing the assortment in kerosene, preparing to ignite the remnants of the victims’ pasts, Andy Erhart, Mr. Clutter’s closest confidante, reflects on the merits of the family and speculates about the repercussions of the atrocity that has befallen the Clutters- “But that life, and what [Mr. Clutter] had made of it- how could this happen, Erhart wondered as he watched the bonfire catch. How was it possible that such effort, such plain virtue, could overnight be reduced to this- smoke, thinning as it rose and was received by the big, annihilating sky?”

    The beauty of this passage and the simplistic metaphor it contains is found in its succinct and accurate reflection of the human attitude toward death. The Clutters were prominent citizens in Holcomb: Mr. Clutter was a successful and philanthropic farmer. Nancy Clutter was class president and future prom queen. With such esteem, it seems unnatural, even preposterous, that something as commonplace as death should have the power to desecrate the upstanding reputation that the family has built for itself. This ideal is neatly summarized in Andy’s thoughts. Furthermore, the symbolism of smoke as the Clutter family’s legacy is a clever rhetorical device employed by the author. Even the largest, most impactful fire is eventually reduced to smoke, much like the influential lives of the family. Lastly, the use of the word “annihilating” to describe the expansive sky adds an unexpectedly foreboding aspect to the passage, implying that the Clutters’ memory will dissipate just as surely as the smoke is obliterated by the sky.
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  2. “After rain, or when snowfalls thaw, the streets, unnamed, unshaded, unpaved, turn from the thickest dust into the direst mud. At one end of the town stands a stark old stucco structure, the roof of which supports an electric sign – Dance – but the dancing has ceased and the advertisement has been dark for several years. Nearby is another building with an irrelevant sign, this one is flaking fold on a dirty window – Holcomb Bank. The bank closed in 1933 and its former counting rooms have been converted into apartments” (1-2).

    There are many reasons that this passage struck me as I was choosing among my favorite passages in the book. Capote employs a complex style and uses many subordinate clauses in his prose. This technique creates a unique cadence, but the cadence of this passage stood out among the rest. He uses three past participles, “unnamed, unshaded, unpaved, to describe the streets of Holcomb. This clever device shows us that Holcomb is a small town that has not caught up with some modern conveniences such as paved roads without coming out and saying it blatantly. Capote subtly gives up some other interesting details about Holcomb, Kansas in this passage. He tells us that the Holcomb Bank closed in 1933, the peak of the Great Depression. He also tells us that there is a vacant dance hall in Holcomb. Presumably, the dance hall was a popular establishment in the 1920’s that went out of business during the Depression. These two details show the reader that Holcomb was hit hard by the Depression and is still recovering from its implications. The way that Capote delicately gives us detail makes this passage one of my favorites in the book. Another aspect of this passage that I thought was interesting was the foreshadowing at the beginning of the passage. He tells us that the streets of Holcomb turned from “the thickest dust into the direst mud” after it rains. The roads can be interpreted as a symbol for the Holcomb community, while the rain symbolizes tragedy for the community, such as the Clutter murders. The rain turns the roads into the “direst mud,” just like the Clutter murders turned the community into a disarray of fear and confusion. He uses the word “direst” to describe the mud, which is interesting because usually that word is used to describe a dire situation. By describing the situation of the roads after rain, he foreshadows the “dire” atmosphere of Holcomb after the Clutter tragedy.

I found the above passages from Anna's Stone AP English 2013 blogsite. Her blog site required students to respond to various online assignments over summer vacation. I liked this assignment called Favorite Sentence(s) so well that I felt it was beneficial to show you the level of writing by other 11th grade AP students; however, I added an additional activity where you respond to one other classmate in a specific manner.

 

Your Task: Find a favorite passage and explain the stylistic devices and/or rhetorical strategies that Truman Capote uses. After you post your response, your next task is to respond to one student's favorite passage by discussing how their passage connects to a theme or advances/contributes to the novel-like structure. You must cite the page number(s) for your favorite passage in order to assist the person repsonding to your post. Also, please sign your repsonse by indicating to me your class period.

This assignment is worth 40 Points.

Due Dates:
  • Monday, November 5th: Your favorite passage with your analysis.       
  • Wednesday, November 7th: Your response to a classmate which highlights a theme within the novel or discusses the purpose of the passage by how the passage advances the plot or contributes to the novel-like structure that Capote creates.

Please note that your repsonse to one classmate will take more time than usual; therefore, your entire blog response cannot be completed on Wednesday night.

111 comments:

  1. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    Though 'In Cold Blood' is a work of nonfiction, Truman Capote describes the minutest details in such a sensory fashion that it seems like a novel. One such passage, found on page 73, is as follows:
    "Far off, in the town of Olathe, in a hotel room where window shades darkened the midday sun, Perry lay sleeping, with a gray portable radio murmuring beside him. Except for taking off his boots, he had not troubled to undress. He had merely fallen face down across the bed, as though sleep were a weapon that had struck him from behind. The boots, black and silver-buckled, were soaking in a washbasin filled with war, vaguely pink-tinted water."
    First, this passage begins a chapter immediately following a very emotional scene: Nancy Clutter's sweetheart mourning. The stark contrast between this and a guy asleep on a bed is quite jarring.
    Capote mentions a small, gray, portable radio. This is one of several references to this nondescript radio, which is later revealed to be Kenyon's. Though the reader does not know it at the time, this little radio is a constant reminder of the murders. Capote also uses a simile, comparing sleep to a "weapon that had struck him from behind," showing the abrupt nature of Perry's slumber.
    Finally, Capote's careful attention to the boots sums up what the rest of this passage is hinting at: there is more than what meets the eye. A radio playing isn't unusual. Someone sleeping isn't unusual. Black boots with silver buckles aren't unusual. But the "vaguely pink-tinted water" reminds the reader that this sleeping man has just murdered an entire family the night before. There was blood on those ordinary boots, and that ordinary radio was stolen from a dead boy.
    Contrast, repetition, and similes enhance Capote's work greatly.
    Sincerely,
    Jessica Meek, Period 2

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    1. Dear Jessica,

      The examples you used were excellent for highlighting how Capote added sensory elements to his work to enhance the novel-like structure.

      I think that the overall theme of the novel is one of melancholy. Scenes like the one with Perry and Dick in the hotel room take what would otherwise be an ordinary scene and almost immediately turn it into a melancholic one. The sadness in the novel seems to be pensive and long-lasting. Scenes of beautiful Kansas days or an otherwise normal or happy event are immediately taken over by repercussions of the murder of the Clutters.

      Respectfully,
      Griffin Madden, Period 1

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  2. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    Truman Capote created and mastered an entirely new genre of literature with his book "In Cold Blood" - the non-fiction novel. In his work, he creates a deep, sensory experience that connects the reader to the story in a way that no novel had before.

    A highly sensory experience, like the one described above, can be found on page 77, in paragraph 1. "That Monday, the sixteenth of November, 1959, was still another fine specimen of pheasant weather on the high wheat plains of western Kansas - a day gloriously bright-skied, as glittery as mica." This sentence illustrates a beautiful Kansas day - stark in contrast to the events that unfolded the previous day. Capote describes the day "as glittery as mica" - one of the many similes he uses throughout the novel to create comparisons that put vivid images in the reader's head.

    Another set of contrasting events lies on the same page, in paragraph 2. "Today this quartet of old hunting companions had once again gathered to make the familiar journey, but in an unfamiliar spirit and armed with odd, non-sportive equipment - mops and pails." This sentence looks at the three of Herb Clutter's closest friends gathered to go the Clutter property, but not to hunt game - to clean a crime scene.

    Capote's use of contrast in the novel creates a chilling and captivating experience for the reader by connecting events that are starkly different in their context. His use of similes draw comparisons to events or scenes that help the reader see the novel as if it were real and right in front of them.

    Respectfully,
    Griffin Madden, Period 1

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    1. Dear Griffin,
      Your pinpointing of Capote’s exemplary uses of contrast as well as his ability to create a “deep, sensory experience” for his audience was exceptional. The passages you selected to share were very important to the favorable outcome of the entire novel. Your response and explanation of your selections also made me better able to recognize the pieces Capote put together to form the story in a novel-like structure.
      A novel, more specifically a non-fiction novel, is a genre of literature that depicts real historical events and figures using the storytelling techniques of fiction. The passages you highlighted were a perfect combination of the depicting of actual events and the exercising of storytelling and journalistic views and composition.
      "That Monday, the sixteenth of November, 1959, was still another fine specimen of pheasant weather on the high wheat plains of western Kansas - a day gloriously bright-skied, as glittery as mica."
      This sentence demonstrates a contribution to the structure utilized by Capote- an introduction and description of the time, the place, the setting, the occurrence.

      Respectfully,
      Kekai Gonsalves
      Period 2

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  3. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In my opinion, there is no argument to suggest “In Cold Blood” is anything but a work of literary genius. With it, Truman Capote revolutionized the Non-Fiction genre, creating a whole new style known as the Non-Fiction Novel, which tells a series of true events like a story. Because this novel is a goldmine of superb writing, it was difficult for me to choose my favorite passage. However, I did select this example in particular:

    “But we have very little control over our human weaknesses, & this applies also to Fern & the hundreds of thousands of other people including ourselves- for we all have weaknesses. In your case- I don’t know what your weakness is but I do feel- IT IS NO SHAME TO HAVE A DIRTY FACE-THE SHAME COMES WHEN YOU KEEP IT DIRTY.”

    In this passage, Capote incorporates a letter from Perry’s only living sister (Bobo). The most obvious device he uses is sentence structure. By putting emphasis upon the last sentence in capitals, Capote really tells the reader how important it was for Bobo to get Perry to clean up his act. This also adds to his theme of contradiction throughout the book. For example, Bobo previously states “we (humans) have very little control over our human weaknesses” yet she goes on to say “the shame comes when you keep it dirty”. So in result, she proposes that Perry reform himself into a better person when all humans have “little control” over their weaknesses. It’s emphasizing the confliction Perry has with good and bad, for how can he “clean his face” if humans are just prone to have “little control” and so to speak “dirty our faces” again? In addition, by adding this letter to his novel, Capote adds extra detail and develops Perry as a character. The reader gets more insight into the background of a cold-blooded killer, who actually, doesn’t seem so cold-blooded overall.

    Sincerely,
    Maluhia Kinimaka
    Period 1

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    1. Dear Malu,

      I Found your response entertaining to read, I enjoy how you chose a passage that emphasized the physical letter to make a point rather than a play on words. The theme this piece connects to is self-image. Throughout the book Capote depicts even the smallest details of each characters thoughts, emotions, history, and their connection to the Clutter’s which really makes the reader understand each individual. In Bobo letter to Perry she is concerned that he is not behaving genuinely,and is showing the “dirty” side of himself rather than cleaning up his act after just being released from prison. When the characters look at themselves they act on how they view themselves, as you said “The reader gets more insight into the background of a cold-blooded killer, who actually, doesn't seem so cold-blooded overall”.

      Sincerely,
      Podma
      Pd:3

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    2. Dear Malu,
      I agree with podma, I love the passage you chose and agree with you entirely. But as I was looking and thinking in on this I couldn't help but notice the way Bobo emphasized so much shame, and I think we can look at shame as another theme to this book as well. As to how deserted and desolate capote makes the town of Holdcomb to be its almost as if the town is shameful. How it was not able to pick its self up after the depression how capote states "the streets unnamed unshaded and unpaved" how where the sign saying "dance" hangs there is no longer any dancing. It is such a shame. With the Clutter family being people who are doing good, bringing pride to their town, finally wiping their faces of the dirt and again shame is brought to them with their death. It is a tragic theme but one I think should be noted.

      Sincerely,
      Abi Rae Stine
      Period 2

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  4. In Truman Capote’s literary masterpiece, In Cold Blood he uses an array of different rhetorical strategies that capture his readers, leaving them itching to see what happens next. I found some, in particular, that caught my eye, and left me applauding Capote for his use of foreshadow:

    “Now, on this final day of her life, Mrs. Clutter hung in the closet the calico housedress she had been wearing, and put in one of her trailing nightgowns and a fresh set of white socks”

    “Then, touching the brim of his cap, he headed for home and the day’s work, unaware that it would be his last.”

    These two passages both share a similar rhetorical strategy: foreshadowing. Capote cleverly puts the skill of foreshadowing to use by saying things like “Now, on this final day of her life” and “unaware that it would be his last”. By adding these phrases to these passages, it allows the reader to get sort of a sneak peek of what is to happen next, and at the same time, leaves the reader with a chilling sensation of suspense. These passages also stood out to me because it’s basically describing Mr. and Mrs. Clutter’s final moments of life before they were brutally murdered. The aspect that really haunts me is that they were carrying on with a normal day like any other, totally ignorant of what their future held that horrific night. Capote makes this clear by foreshadowing the events that lie ahead.
    Sincerely,
    Lexy Stogner Pd. 1

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    1. Dear Lexy,

      The theme that comes to mind when I read your favorite passages was pure suspense. Keeping in mind that the reader is unsure of how the events are going to play out, Capote points out subtle clues from the Clutters last day in the beginning of the book. Herb Clutter takes out a forty thousand dollar life insurance policy, which pays double indemnity in the case of murder. He was very well known for not carrying cash. The family dog is gun-shy. Perry even tears the glove that they plan to use during the robbery, which seems highly unlucky to him. Each of these events are foreshadowing the outcome of the story and hinting towards the outcome of how the story may end. Your examples of foreshadowing were very well stated might I add!

      Sincerely,
      Maria Fish Pd: 2

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    1. Dear Aj,
      I like how you used the example to tell us how capote captured you to keep reading the book, but i would have to say that it was hard for me to read the book at first i liked the imagery, but it bored me alot.
      It also made me question things like " i thought the country was a quiet place, thats same"

      Sincerely
      Kristen Yam

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  7. Dear Ms. Carlson

    From Capote's masterpiece "In Cold Blood" there were many passages that to me seemed to come to life, however, there was one passage from pg. 9 that caught my eye rather quickly; about of course the Clutter's house and it's unique design.
    "The house-for the most part designed by Mr. Clutter, who thereby proved himself a sensible and sedate, if not notably decorative architect- had been built in 1948 for forty thousand dollars. (The resale value was now sixty thousand dollars.) situated at the end of a long, lanelike driveway shaded by rows of Chinese elms, the handsome white house, standing on the ample lawn of groomed Bermuda grass, impressed Holcomb; it was a place people pointed out"

    From this passage, there was a canvas in my head, and slowly through reading this rather well detailed and impressively described household i could paint on that canvas what i thought to be the Holcomb household;the decorative decor, the chinese elms that marked the driveway, it's shiny white coat, the well kept Bermuda grass, and it's sensible and sedated design that was so refined it caught the whole town's attention, a marvel of 1940's architecture. And good lord, if the resale value was 60,000 back then, i wonder what it would be now?!
    I'm usually not one to enjoy depressing and rather gruesome tales like "In Cold Blood" however it's descriptive imagery and details always keep my eyes on the pages, and creates the time and place of the Clutter family murder.

    Sincerely
    Brandon Jenks Pd.1

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    1. Dear Brandon,
      While reading your response to our assignment I was surprised to see that, that particular piece got you so fascinated in that way. I could have never invisioned it like you did. That way that you elaborated in your response to your passage about the Holcomb residence was to me very engaging. Not only for the fact that you have such great evidence to back up your passage but you put in your own examples in living today. In other words the way that you perceived an described your response was like reading sentences from Truman Capotes novel. You use description in your language of speech not only in writing wise but as well in real life. I feel like you were spot on in the revelation of highlighting your passage response an I myself agree an like how you interrupted it in your own style an the way you used diction.
      With most Aloha an respect, Kelieann Nuesca Pd. 1

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  8. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    One of my favorite passages from " The last to see them alive" is the last paragraph of Willie-Jays letter to Perry, in with he rights " You are a man of extreme passion, a hungry man not quiet sure where his appetite lies. A deeply frustrated man striving to protect his individuality against a backdrop of rigid conformity. you exist it a half world suspended between two superstructures, one self-expression and the other self-destruction. you are strong, but there is a flaw in your strength, and unless you learn to control it the flaw will prove stronger than your strength and defeat you. The flaw? Explosive emotional reaction out of all proportion to the occasion."

    This is one of my favorite passages because of Capotes use of diction and description deeply and perfectly describes Perrys complicated personality. It goes deeper than a standard view of this character as simply troubled, or confused. He recognizes the cause, and separates Perrys flaws from his mislead motives and actions. Where he uses diction in " you exist it a half world suspended between two superstructures, one self-expression and the other self-destruction. " I think this beautifully describes Perrys trouble of separating expressing himself in a good way to a bad way. Which can lead to further explanation to his current and past life of committing crime. And also be the product of a unstable child hood. "unless you learn to control it the flaw will prove stronger than your strength and defeat you." These perfectly describes self struggle. The flaw being emotionally unstable, which again can mislead Perry to his life of destruction. And his strength being a passionate man, with a kindness to him.

    Capotes passage describing Perry as a flawed man, but generally good and unique. By doing this it gives the reader a more personal relationship to him and tends to make you side with him. It makes the murder seem less like a straight cold killing, and more like a sad troubled mistake by a mislead man.

    Sincerely,
    Whitney Beck
    pd 2

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  10. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In the non-fiction novel, "In Cold Blood", Truman Capote uses many rhetorical strategies that help to enhance his story. One of my personal favorite passages comes from page 147, when we get to see what is in Perry's "Private Diary".

    '"What is life? It is the flash of a firefly in the night. It is abreath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is as the little shadow that runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset." -Said by Cheif crowfoot, Blackfoot Indian Cheif.'

    This quote is using personification. The little shadow is personified as running across the grass. This quote gives off a very dream- like feel. The way it describes life gives it a hint of fantasy, which from this book, is something different.

    This use of personification adds some gusto to the story and keeps it interesting. It also shows the reader what kinds of things Perry thought about, and shows the more mystical side of him.

    Sincerely,
    Cassie Wilson

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    1. Dear Cassie,
      The passage you picked illustrates the theme of the brevity of life. As important, popular, and good as the Clutters were, their lives ended, and time kept marching on. Perry, who liked the quote you selected, seemed to understand that no life will last forever. Every person has a time to die. Even if their death causes a lot of excitement, it will soon fade. As Capote writes his novel, he is subtly showing the reader that no person knows how many days they have left to live.
      Sincerely,
      Jessica Meek, period 2

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  11. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    My favorite passage from “In Cold Blood” is said by Nancy Clutters close friend Susan Kidwell. In it; Truman Capote uses imagery, flashback, and a sullen, distant reminiscent tone.

    “Across the street a man was raking leaves. I kept looking at him. Because i didn't want to close my eyes. I thought, if i do i'll faint. So i watched him rake leaves and burn them. Watched, without really seeing him. Because all i could see was the red dress. I knew it so well. I helped her pick the material. It was her own design, and she sewed it herself. I remember how excited she was the first time she wore it. At a party. All i could see was Nancy’s red velvet. And Nancy in it. Dancing”.

    Honestly, this passage was one of the few that actually really truly stood out to me. Susan Kidwell and Nancy viewed their relationship more than friends, but like sisters. Capote descriptively illustrates the Clutter families attire they are to be buried in, But the emphasis is on Nancy and her “cherry-red velvet” dress.
    Flashback is delivered in this section by Susan Kidwell, who is tainted by the image of seeing Nancy in the prideful red dress that carried so much memory of their friendship. She is so lost in delirium that she stares at the man across the street raking leaves, and deeply remembers the beginning of the red velvet dress.
    Just from how this passage is written it seems obvious that Susan Kidwell was sad. Capote shares her sullenness by indicating a distant and reminiscent tone. The way that such short sentences are made, and how....chopped the words seem to be pieced together, it makes even me, the reader, feel her sorrow.

    Respectfully,
    Podma Phillips
    Pd: 3

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    1. Dear Podma,

      I really liked that you chose this passage from the novel because this passage really clicked for me and i understood it well. The theme that comes to mind when I read this passage is disturbed. When susan sees her dead friend wearing the velvet dress she helped pick out before the killings susan is rushed with the feelings and memories that are shared with her friend. Instead of picturing nancy in the dress dancing she is now left with the vision of nancy dead in her casket. Nancy goes back to the truck to try and get the disturbing images out of her head but every time she closes her eyes the vision comes back to her, she continues to be lost in a disturbed delirium.
      Sincerely,
      Sariah Beeby pd. 1

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  14. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    "But Dick had made up his mind: stockings of any kind were unnecessary, an encumbrance, a useless expense ("I've already invested enough money in this operation"), and, after all, anyone they encountered would not live to bear witness. "No witnesses," he reminded Perry, for what seemed to Perry the millionth time. It rankled in him, the way Dick mouthed those two words, as though they solved every problem; it was stupid not to admit that there might be a witness they hadn't seen. "The ineffable happens, things do take a turn," he said. But Dick, smiling boastfully, boyishly, did not agree: "Get the bubbles out of your blood. Nothing can go wrong." No. Because the plan was Dick's, and from first footfall to final silence, flawlessly devised." (37)

    In this passage from Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood", Capote uses dialogue and first person perspective to show the conflict and tension between Dick and Perry. Capote uses dialogue between the two criminals paired with Perry's thoughts to show how the two men differed concerning their approach to the heist and getting off clean. Perry's thoughts help to show his attitude towards Dick's character. The dialogue from Dick and Perry shows that Dick was slightly aggressive and authoritative, annoying Perry.I like that Capote's use of these rhetorical strategies was so effective that he only needed a small paragraph to convey Perry's feelings towards Dick.

    Respectfully,
    Aveilana Saldana Pd.2

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    2. Dear Ave,

      In this passage that you have exerted from the book, it defines Perry's thoughts towards Dick well. As you said it shows the tension between the pair of criminals briskly but fully. This may in a sense be considered as the rhetorical strategy of foreshadowing, that with this tension between them, something may not go as planned.

      Respectfully,
      Taylor McGinnis Pd. 1

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    3. Dear Ave,

      From this passage you wrote about from the book, it describes Perry's thoughts towards Dick, like you described, in a very great manner. You were very right about the relationship between the two, especially towards Perry's feelings on their relationship and within one another. I think that it would, just like Taylor, before me wrote, would be a foreshadow because a lot of what goes on between the two do not go as planned, especially when Perry tries to talk to Dick.

      Sincerely,
      Shianne Schorr
      Period 2

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  16. Dear Mrs. Carlson,
    Throughout Truman Capote's non-fiction novel, "In Cold Blood", he had a tool belt of go to rhetorical strategies. These enhanced the piece in an ever so perfect manner. He didn't use too much or too little of specific devices. A personally adored passage excerpted from the first section, "The Last to See Them Alive", fifth paragraph.

    Many different rhetorical approaches can be exhibited within this paragraph. I'd like to highlight his use of an anaphora, "Like the waters of the river, like the motorists on the highway, like the yellow trains streaking down the Santa Fe tracks..." Copote used this anaphora to emphasize that drama doesn't "stop" in Holcomb.

    Another stylistic method found in this passage was a personification concluding the paragraph. In a way ever so pleasing Copote writes "those somber explosions that stimulated fires of mistrust in the glare of which many old neighbors viewed each other strangely, and as strangers." Copote gives the shotgun blasts a human trait of trust or mistrust in this case. He uses this personification to create a sense of emotion without saying exactly that the murder of the Clutter family made people feel insecure about their safety.

    Sincerely,
    Kulia Blalock
    PD3

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  17. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    In Truman Capote's novel "In Cold Blood" he uses descriptive writing and rhetorical strategies to make the reader feel connected to the book, all the while he created and mastered a new genre of writing during his time. There are many passages through out the book novel that stood out to me but on in particular is a quote from page 176:
    "It is almost impossible for a man who enjoys freedom with all it prerogatives, to realize what it means to be deprived of that freedom." - Erle Stanley Gardner
    To me this passage shows foreshadow. It is taken out of Perry's notebook most likely written while he was in jail the first time for stealing. Capote put this particular quote in the novel because it adds more details on the complex personalities of Dick and Perry. It makes the reader wonder why Perry would have committed such a crime again if he had already experience being "deprived of freedom"
    Sincerely,
    Sariah Beeby pd. 1

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    1. Dear Sariah,

      i strongly agree with you in the terms that Turman uses descriptive writing and rhetorical strategies to make the reader feel connected to the book. I enjoy the passage you chose taken out of Perry's notebook and agree on how you wrote how it makes the reader wonder why Perry would have committed such a crime.

      sincerely,
      Lianna Patey

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  18. Dear Ms. Carlson

    When reading this book you realize how genius this book is by just analyzing the way he writes and the fact that he turned this non fiction story into a novel creating a new genre.

    I wouldn't say this passage is my neccessarly my favorite, but it's during the letter, from Barbara. The passage says, "I have "fallen" at times, as it is normal-for as I said I am human & therefore I too have human weaknesses but the point is, again, There is no shame- having a dirty face-the shame comes from when you keep it dirty. No one is aware of my shortcomings and mistakes than myself so I won't bore you".

    In this passage, Capote uses repetition in a way. In Maluhia's response she put up her favorite passage which is the section or passage before mine. It mentioned "IT is no shame to have a dirty face-the shame comes when you keep it dirty". (this is all in caps). It is brought up again as she wanted to emphasize the point. She compares herself to human weakness as it is "normal" for a human to have "fallen". She tries to incorporate the message of no human is perfect as everyone makes mistakes and that he is no exception to the rule ether. It also is kind of ironic that if she told him at the time in the house then maybe these events would not have occurred. He also puts emphasis on the word "fallen" to show like the feeling of the event that she wants to point out to Perry.

    Respectfully,
    Kalani Murakami




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  19. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    Like some of my fellow classmates i agree about the fact that in the novel "In Cold Blood" Truman Capote uses a blend of different rhetorical strategies in his introduction. Some of those strategies he uses is description and structure. By doing this Capote captures your views in many ways. To think that his introduction has so much effort for you to just picture the lonesome, boring, western town of Holdcomb,Kansas , is such a wide stretch. He Takes paragraph by paragraph explaining the towns people, the buildings, and last but not least the entire setting of Holcomb its self. "The local accent is barbed with a prairie twang, a ranch-hand nasalness, and the men,many of them, wear narrow frontier trousers, Stetsons,and high-heeled boots with pointed toes." That's an example of description Capote uses in his novel.
    Sincerely,
    Alexis Vicente
    Period 2

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  20. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    It was very difficult for me to decide on a favorite passage from "In Cold Blood". However one of the things that most stood out was when a school teacher was talking:

    “Feeling wouldn’t run half so high of this had happened to anyone except the Clutters. Anyone less admired. Prosperous. Secure. But that family represented everything people hereabouts really value and respect, and that such a thing could happen to them-well, it’s like being told there is no God. It makes life seem pointless. I don’t think people are so much frightened as they are deeply depressed.” (Pg. 88)

    The rhetorical strategies that are used are similes and metaphors, which the loss of the Clutters is contrasted with something of greater loss, such as God, or life being pointless. Another strategy used was point of view, showing how the school teacher had felt the town was depressed instead of frighten, which is a big contrast about how people were out buying locks for their house. It shows how she viewed the loss of a family that “represented everything people there had valued and respected.”

    Sincerely,
    Alanna Bauman Pd. 2

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    1. Dear Alanna,

      I really like the passage you chose. It relates a lot to the religious Clutters. A possible theme that this particular portion of the story could be "Injustice". The school teacher mentions all the tragedy behind their murders. Like how you mentioned "life being pointless" was a prime example of what she though of "injustice". I like how your reply was nice and simple!

      Sincerely,
      Jimmelle Parong
      Period Two

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  22. Dear Ms.Carlson,

    The novel “In Cold Blood” by Truman Capote holds some of the most descriptive writings I have ever comprehended. I am very fascinated by all the different ways Truman describes the subjects in his book. It was difficult for me to find just one passage that I most appreciated but this one stuck out to me strangely. “Like those puzzles. The ones that ask, ‘how many animals can you find in this picture?’ In a way, that’s what I’m trying to do. Find the hidden animals. I feel they must be there-if only could see them.” Page 83.

    This passage stood out to me because it made me realize how many people’s lives get affected by another’s death. In this part of the story, Dewey is spending so much of his time trying to figure out who murdered his fellow town mates. He works day and night none stop – sometimes at the cost of his family-to crack this case. This quote shows how in detail he gets to figuring out every little detail he can about every object, picture, or clue he has on this case. Dewey’s commitment to finding who murdered the Clutters and why, seems to become the narrative, and make me imperative to continue reading to discover, finally, what actually happened.

    Respectfully,
    Lianna Patey
    Prd.2

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  24. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    Truman Capote's uses an incredible amount of rhetorical strategies that keeps the reader intrieged and creates a diverse reading pallette that is carefully placed throughout the novel.

    My favorite passage in the book was "This hitherto peaceful congregation of neighbors and old friends had suddenly to endure the unique experience of distrusting each other; understandably, they believed that the murderer was among themselves”(88).

    Capote uses diction very well throughout this passage. After the murders had occurred, the citizens of Holcomb held a congregation. The words peaceful congregation contradicts the word murderer. Opposites occur throughout this sentence. For example the words peaceful and murderer and understandably and distrusting, also contradict each other. This creates a tone of suspense and tension. The town of Holcomb is now losing its dull innocent features and starting to gnaw at the residents’ minds.Because of this, the residents are now becoming fearful of one another. This creates a very different atmosphere and keeps the reader feeling just as on edge as the townspeople.

    Sincerely,
    Maria Fish Pd: 2

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    1. Dear Maria,

      The passage you choose was similar to something that I had found. I really think that this passage connected to one of the themes of the novel, loss of innocence. When the people of Holcomb were faced with dealing with a tragedy, that was not commonly associated with that town, they had to “endure the unique experience of distrusting each other”.
      Also I this passage felt like it was the real turning point in the novel involving trust and sanity because it was a universal feeling throughout the town and really contributed to a new fear the townspeople had.

      Sincerely,
      Alanna Bauman Pd. 2

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    2. Dear Maria,
      This passage, in particular, definitely has a huge purpose in the progression of this bone chilling story. Capote gives his readers a sense of suspense and curiosity as he suggests that "the murderer was among themselves." This allows the book to progress, simply because it opens a door allowing Capote to let the readers know who exactly killed the Clutter family. The overall purpose of this passage was to create suspense, which is exactly what Capote did.
      Sincerely,
      Lexy Stogner Pd 1

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  25. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    The non-fiction novel "In Cold Blood" written by Truman Capote was astonishing in the way Capote was able to turn a murder case into a story appealing to the reader, and in doing this creating a new genre. There was more than one passage that I liked in terms of Rhetorical Strategies which made choosing one to write about somewhat difficult. The way Capote wrote this story explaining the horrid event that occurred in Holcomb, Kansas was written so beautifully, a masterpiece you could say, due to his remarkable use of Rhetorical strategies. Of these that are most effective is the vivid descriptions and imagery, diction, and similes, flashbacks, and foreshadowing.
    My favorite passage clearly shows these Rhetorical strategies at work and was appealing to me as a reader.
    "The four coffins, which quite filled the small, flower-crowded parlor, were to.be sealed at the funeral services--very understandably, for despite the care taken with the appearance of the victims, the effect achieved was disquieting. Nancy wore her dress of cherry-red velvet, her brother a bright plaid shirt; the parents were more sedately attired, Mr. Clutter in navy-blue flannel, his wife in navy-blue crepe; and--and it was this especially that lent the scene an awful aura--the head of each was completely encased in cotton, a swolen cocoon twice the size of an ordinary blown up balloon, and the cotton, because it had been sprayed with glossy substance, twinkled like Christmas-tree snow." (95).
    The way Capote desribes this scene shows the work of imagery and along with it the feelings and emotions that overtake the reader which helps move along the story. By using imagery, Capote allows the reader to see the haunting effects brought about by the murder of this innocent, well-known and loved Clutter Family.
    "Despite the care taken with the appearance of the victims, the effect achieved was disquieting". This demonstrates the fact that murder had occurred and there was no way of fixing it, not even with their appearance which was crutial because it is of remindance that the acts done to this family were brutal.
    The emphasis Capote uses to describe the heads encased in cotton shows how it added to an "awful aura" of this sight. In my opinion, if that were to be people I knew and were.close to, I would not want to have that be the last image of the family in my head. The cotton cocoons in which incased the heads were not ordinary and gives an uncomfortable feeling and deep sorrow for what happend to them. And this scene was not ordinary just as it was unordinary for the family to be murdered.
    The cotton "twinkled like Christmas-tree snow". This use of diction gives a contrast to the description of this scene, which is much related to the themes used in this novel. Christmas, what comes to mind is a time of happiness and gathering of loved ones in celebration, and the christmas tree is much admired for the beauty and effort into decorating it; Far unlike this circumstance of effort into appearance and this gathering of loved ones will be of sorrow and grievance as the event is due to deaths of loved ones. The many will not see the family as the coffins will be closed at the funeral which leaves them with just memories they had of them. This simile was very much necessary in displaying a theme of contrast.

    Respectfully,
    Jalissa Rapozo-Carveiro Pd.3

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    1. Continue:

      I also noticed that the "dress of cherry-red velvet" Nancy wore was very meaningful as pertaining to her pride in it as she had made it herself and it triggered a memory for her best friend Susan Kidwell. This was mentioned in Podma's blog entry, which ties into Capote's use of flashback in which works to add to the sadness in this scene and the contrast in which Nancy, once excited and wearing the dress at a party, is now dead, wearing it in a coffin to her grave. On pg. 56, the night of the murder , Nancy was laying out her clothes for church which included her red velveteen dress, "it was the dress in which she was to be buried". This provides the rhetorical strategy of foreshadowing as it gives an insight of the tragedy that was about to become of her and the rest of her family, and the dress she would soon wear to her grave instead of church the next morning.

      Delete
  26. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    "He unzippered a pocket of his windbreaker and brought out a paper sack; inside it were the recently purchased rubber gloves. They were glue-covered, sticky and thin, and as he inched them on, one tore-not a dangerous tear, just a split between the fingers, but it seemed to him an omen." pg. 53

    Above is a passage extracted from Truman Capote's crime novel, "In Cold Blood". A rhetorical strategy that stands out in this passage is foreshadowing. The ripping of the glove although it wasn't a "dangerous tear" foreshadows that everything won't unfold as planned. A person can then infer that as you read on, something bad is going to happen. Although I wouldn't say this was my favorite passage in the story, I did enjoy how Capote took a simple thing, such as a glove, and use it to foreshadow Perry's future.

    Sincerely,
    Taylor McGinnis Pd. 1

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    Replies
    1. Dear Taylor,

      Great response!I think that this passage definitely highlights the overall purpose that Capote has for writing the non-fiction novel: To tell a real event as a story. These passages, littered throughout this literary masterpiece, contain details that are so minuscule and believable that they make you believe that this event really happened. The foreshadowing you mentioned was a good literary technique as well. The fact that Capote uses simple objects and metaphors is part of what makes his literature so potent.

      Sincerely,
      Casey Nakamura, PD1

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    2. Dear Taylor,

      The passage you choose was a very interesting and haunting one. One of the things that I really like about Capote's writing, is that he seems to use the rhetorical strategy of foreshadowing. This strategy enhances his writing by letting the reader know that something bad is going to happen while the charachters in the story are totally oblivious to it all. It keeps the tension and antisipation throughout the story.

      Sincerely,
      Cassie Wilson
      Pd2

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    3. Dear Taylor,

      I believe that Capote's use of foreshadowing as a rhetorical device in this passage helps to convey his purpose of building Perry's character into one of intelligence, while builing some sympathy for Perry. Capote expresses Perry as a very intellectual individual, much brighter than Dick. Even though Perry was the cautious one out of the two he still got screwed over along with Dick who was much more reckless.

      Respectfully,
      Aveilana Saldana Pd.2

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    4. Dear Taylor,

      Based on this passage, it shows the type of writing Capote has. Which I think is mostly based on foreshadowing. I think that Capote uses foreshadowing as his rhetorical strategy in this passage because in this passage it is explaining the character of Perry, who is apparently a lot more fascinating than Dick is. Capote gets you hooked on these situations, that, even if they aren't good or exciting moments that you know are probably in someway going to be bad, you still are interested.

      Sincerely,
      Shianne Schorr
      Period 2

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  27. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    My favorite passage from "In Cold Blood", by Truman Capote, would have to be the one that comes at the beginning of page 331 When he describes "The Corner". The passage reads,

    "It was just after midnight, and the warehouse was lit up like a Halloween pumpkin. The doors wide open. We could see the witnesses, a lot of guards, and the warden - every damn thing but the gallows. It was off at an angle, but we could see it's shadow. A shadow on the wall like the shadow of a boxing ring."

    This passage is one of my favorites because it gives an insight into the personality of the character in a novel that, being written from a third-person standpoint, is rare and captivating. The simple metaphors lend the passage an air of plausibility, which is an essential element of the non-fiction novel. Comparing the warehouse to a Halloween pumpkin paints the premises in a creepy kind of light. The lack of the sight of the gallows makes the scene reflect the fact that death is unknown and as yet unseen to the two inmates.Finally, the metaphor comparing the shadows of the gallows to that of a boxing ring is not only also written in a simple-minded, believable tone, but conveys the symbol of violence that the gallows ultimately represent.
    I apologize for choosing a passage from later on in the book, but it really was my favorite. The pacing of this paragraph really gives it a genuine feel that, for the first time while reading the book, gave me a sense of the reality of death for the two characters that we have come to love.

    Sincerely,
    Casey Nakamura, PD1

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  28. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    In Truman Capotes non-fiction novel "In Cold Blood," gives me as a reader such an amazing way to be engaged in his book by going on into grave detail of description to his writing. That in case is a rhetorical strategy.
    One of my favorite passages in this particular book would gave to be (pg. 147) when we are able to encounter the thoughts of the murder suspect Perry's thoughts:

    "What is life? It is the flash of a firefly in the night. It is a breathof a buffalo in the winter time. It is as the little shadow that runs across the grads and loses itself in the sunset." - said by Chief Crowfoot, Blackfoot Indian Chief.

    That passage stuck out to me the most because we ourselves as human beings dont really know what the meaning of life is! Well of course the only substitution of knowing the definition is if we actually live it an experience the reality for ourselves. We can't go off of other people's beliefs or thoughts, but on what we believe in to make our thoughts out own reality an future. The way that he describes it though is of rare observations an unique objects or things.

    This use was of course personification. But as well has he went into description as well through out the seasons an times of day, even in animals. Yes he used the animals to signify the life histories but he tied all of that into one tk keep the reader as in us more into the story. Or in other words to givebit a little "ummfff!"

    Sincerely, Kelieann Nuesca, Pd. 1

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    Replies
    1. Dear Kelieann

      I really like the passage you've selected! Not only did it caught my attention, but it also gave me a perspective on how we, as humans, view this stage called "Life". The way how Capote describes the thoughts of these characters, makes me want to read the passage to see how this criminal views the world!

      Sincerely AJ Cummings, Pd 3

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  29. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    In the book "In cold blood" by Truman Capote, there were many passages that really stood out to me and made my decision quite difficult to just choose one. However, since I had to I choose this one-

    “The local accent is barbed with a prairie twang, a ranch-hand nasalness, and the men, many of them, wear narrow frontier trousers, Stetsons and high-heeled boots with pointed toes.” (p.3)

    As soon as you open the book to page 1 and begin reading, the depth of the description Capote uses is quite amazing. As you read further on there's like a constant picture painted in your mind that makes you feel like your right there watching everything that's happening as Capote explains it to you. Therefore, the rhetorical stratgey being used in this passage is description.

    Sincerely,
    Ashlie Overmyer
    Period:3

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    Replies
    1. Dear Ashlie,
      I like your comments about that passage being very descriptive. I think that Capote uses this strategy a lot throughout this book to get his theme across. He also does this so that he can make us feel like the audience or us, are in the book and can have a better background and a better understanding in what he is trying to accomplish in setting his tone of the book.
      Sincerely, Maile Tuttle period 3

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  30. Dear Ms.Carlson,
    Truman Capote truly used all the tools at his disposal to make "In Cold Blood" what it is. Capote uses a flurry of rhetorical devices and to pick one passage from the book was difficult. I found a very simple passage, but I believe it carries great weight within the story.

    “This hitherto peaceful congregation of neighbors and old friends had suddenly to endure the unique experience of distrusting each other; understandably, they believed that the murderer was among themselves.”(pg.88)

    This passage feels extremely significant to me in terms of the story. It shows just how Holcomb was affected by the Clutter family murders. The town of Holcomb was a peaceful community with nothing going on; but then, people are murdered. This small town suddenly turns on each other. Capote says how the town of Holcomb are "neighbors" and that they are "old friends". How would you feel if you couldn't even trust your own neighbor; the fear that they could murder you at any time. This was truly a "unique" experience for the small town of Holcomb.
    Sincerely,
    Kailer Scopacasa Period 1

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    1. Dear Kailer,
      I feel the same i feel like this helped tie into Capotes many different views of Holcomb, which helped us the readers get a better background to the story of this small town. i feel this connects to melancholy and distrusting sort of theme i pick up when reading this part. i feel this plays a vital part in setting up a good image of the sort of thing Holcomb had to endure during these murders. it was definitely unique.
      Respectfully,
      Triston Edmonds

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    2. Dear Kailer,

      The passage that you chose was also one of my favorites from the book. The passage although not very long is so descriptive. I think about the kind of people who live there and how they could believe someone they have known for their whole lives to be a murderer. It really makes me think about the people I have known and for me to believe that they could do this to a seemingly honest, kind family is beyond me. I also think that the pain and this situation that they got into brought the town closer together than ever before and made them realize that not everything in the world is simple.

      Sincerely,
      Nikki Ramos
      Period 1

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    3. Dear Kailer,

      I could not agree more with you about that passage, so much so that all of my thoughts are essentially in your response. This passage helps move the story by showing the effects of the Cutter Family murders. After their deaths, a wave of distrust surges over the citizens of the town as they can no longer trust each other. A lot of negative emotions, providing a way to segway into what is to come in the novel. While I don't think this passage plays into Capote's more important themes, it definitely is a compelling part of this nonfiction story.

      Sincerely,
      Don Maddock
      Period 1

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  31. Dear Ms. Carlson
    This passage is from page 15, “Sitting, he had seemed a more than normal-sized man, a powerful man, with the shoulders, the arms, the thick, crouching torso of a weight lifter, weight lifting was, in fact, his hobby. But some sections of him were not in proportion to others. His tiny feet, encased in short black boots with steel buckles, would have neatly fitted into a delicate lady's dancing slippers; when he stood up, he was no taller than a twelve-year-old child, and suddenly looked, strutting on stunted legs that seemed grotesquely inadequate to the grown-up bulk they supported, not like a well-built truck driver but like a retired jockey, overblown and muscle-bound”.
    In the above passage from In Cold Blood Truman Capote uses imagery and stylistic devices to create a vivid portrait of Perry. Capote use of imagery creates a grotesque physical image of Perry: his disproportionally bulky upper body to his tiny feet. Capote uses alliterations and metaphors combined together to create a rhythm and flow form a very lucid distinct image of Perry as the impish figure that Capote sees him as. And that is where Capote's true genius lies his ability to recognized the powerful impact that combining both imagery and stylistic devices would have on the reader and their physical representation of Perry. In the beginning of the passage Capote portrays Perry as a well built weight-lifter that then goes through a process of emasculation only to end up appearing disfigured freak.
    Sincerely,
    Lars Vali Pd. 2

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    Replies
    1. Dear Lars,
      It is truly amazing what Capote can pop into my head. As Capote is describing what Perry appears like, I can see him perfectly in my head due to his powerful imagery. He also uses alliteration such as comparing Perry to a "retired jockey". In this one passage, Capote also manages to put in a simile just to support his imagery. Capote distorts our image of Perry from disproportional to straight-up freak of nature. I believe you picked a very good passage Mr.Vali; it uses many rhetorical devices to support a larger purpose; to explain what Perry looks like, and it works beautifully.
      Sincerely,
      Kailer Scopacasa Period 1

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    2. Dear Lars,

      This passage is very effective at depicting Perry. His use of rhetorical devices and comparisons, rather than some police description of him, help distinguish this story as a novel rather than just some retelling. I also think this passage helps contribute to a theme about Capote's opinion on the death sentence. With his depiction, he gives him some meek descriptions such as being small like a child and disproportionate. I feel like all of this is action to gain sympathy for Perry. Other things, like his attraction to the arts also contribute to this. I think this is so that in the end of the novel when he is sentenced to death the readers begin to question if the death sentence is the right thing to do.

      Sincerely,
      Don Maddock
      Period 1

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  32. Dear Mrs.Carlson,
    In this book " In Cold Blood" Truman Capote uses many rhetorical devices to get his point across, add emotion and feeling, and make this book more realistic so that it feels like we are not only reading the book, but that we are actually IN the book.
    My favorite passage from the book so far is found on page 7 of the book which says, " Ordinarily, Mr. Clutters mornings began at six-thirty; clanging milk pails and the whispery chatter of the boys who brought the. Two sons of a hired man named Vic Irsik, usually roused him."
    I chose this as a good passage because of the rhetorical devices it holds. The device that I found that makes this passage a good one is the description. At the beginning it is very descriptive and so, it makes it easy for me to imagine what Mr. clutter is doing in his morning and maybe also get an idea of what his job is or what he likes to do.
    Sincerely, Maile Tuttle Period 3

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    1. Dear Maile,

      I to can definetley see where your coming from when you mention Capote uses many rhetorical devices. With that you mentioned description, it seems to me that this is one of Capote's strongest rhetorical strategies, for example take the first few pages when all he talks about is the City of Holcomb... The way he dives right into it and describes everything from it being a quiet, boring place, to the local accent being barbed with a little kick to it. I find it quite amazing how he paints pictures in your mind as you read on making you feel like your right there with him.

      Sincerely,
      Ashlie Overmyer
      Period: 3

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    2. Dear Maile,

      I think that the passage you chose is really informative in demonstrating one of the most important themes of the book; the fragility of the American Dream. The Clutter family unit, which is an almost textbook reflection of the American Dream, is exhibited in your passage through the description of the duties and workers Mr. Clutter employs. The contrast of the mundane day-to-day life of the Clutters and their gruesome murders exemplifies how tenuous security in America really was back then and is, if even more so, today.

      Sincerely,
      Casey Nakamura, PD1

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    3. Dear Maile,

      I too also agree that Capote uses a variety of rhetorical strategies to make his non-fiction novel realistic. The passage you chose for an example of imagery is very descriptive. I have to agree with Casey and say that your passage connects to the theme of the delicacy American dream. Herb Clutter has made a wonderful life for himself. But Herb Clutter's American dream is shattered by two criminals, Dick and Perry. The American dream is fragile, and it only functions if criminals are not present.

      Respectfully,
      Angelika Questin
      Pd.2

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  33. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In Truman Capote's ernest, yet intense non-fiction novel, he depicts a few different rhetorical strategies. My choice passage so far is:

    "As though for his brother and sisters life had been a bed of roses! Maybe so, if that meant cleaning up Mama's drunken vomit, if it meant never anything nice to wear or enough to eat. Still, it was true, all three had finished high school. Jimmy, in fact, had graduated at the top of his class―an honor he owed entirely to his own will power. That, Barbara Johnson felt, was what made his suicide so ominous. Strong character, high courage, hard work―it seemed that none of there were determining factors in the fates of Tex John's children. They shared a doom against which virtue was no defense." (185)

    Getting more in depth with Capote's mystifying tone, he portrays Barbara as the slightly disheartened sister. Using details from herself and Perry's childhood, a different point of view is displayed. In that last line, she reflects that it was resilient, and almost impossible to escape from. There's some guilt, I see. And her explanation of "..cleaning up Mama's drunken vomit," shows that it wasn't a picture perfect early life. That there was a possibility of it contributing to how Perry ended up in criminal lane. Simply overall, the short narration handed me a clearer understanding of Perry, and his life.

    Sincerely,
    Jimmelle Parong
    Period Two

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    1. Dear Jimmelle,

      I chose to respond to your post because I feel you have selected a quote which highlights the theme of Nature vs. Nurture described in "in Cold Blood". It is a heated topic for many, who disagree if the way one is raised determines how they will end up later on in life. This quote relates to the theme because it shows how Barbara contemplates her family's seemingly bad luck with suicides. Additionally, when Capote writes this, he is reflecting on Perry's family and wether the way he and his siblings were raised had an impact on why Perry committed a heinous crime. Nice blog post!

      Sincerely,
      Maluhia Kinimaka
      Period 1

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    2. Dear jimmelle,
      I enjoyed reading your blog post ! You did a great job on highlighting Perry's childhood and how it might have been the reason why Perry committed such a godawful crime. However, it's incredibly odd that Dick had been raised in a good family, had loving parents, but turned out to committ atrocious acts.

      Respectfully,
      Precious Custodio
      Period 2

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  34. Dear Ms.Carlson,
    Truman Capote uses a wide variety of rhetorical strategies throughout his book “In Cold Blood” to further increase the emotional appeal.
    "However, one woman, a schoolteacher, observed, ‘Feeling wouldn’t run half so high if this had happened to anyone except the Clutters. Anyone less admired. Prosperous. Secure. But that family represented everything people hereabouts really value and respect, and that such a thing could happen to them – well, it’s like being told there is no God. It makes life seem pointless.’”
    The passage above stood out the most to me because it helps me fully grasp the fact that everyone in the town has been greatly affected by the murder of the Clutter family. Capote uses a lot of dialogue throughout the book, but the use of dialogue in this passage was really effective in helping create a sense of horror. The teacher says that ‘the family represented everything people hereabouts really value and respect’ which basically explains that the Clutter’s were the American Dream and mostly everyone was in awe of them. We infer from the passage that the entire town of Holcomb looked up to the Clutter’s and that they were very important people to the town. For such a highly respected and loved family to be murdered like that really enhances the horror and fear throughout Holcomb.
    Sincerely,
    Burgandi Williams
    Pd. 2

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    1. Dear Burgandi,

      I feel that the passage you selected connects to the family theme in this novel. It describes The Clutters and how they "represented everything people hearabouts really value and respect". In the novel, Capote develops his family theme through the portrayal of The Clutters as a "perfect" family, who in turn, were annihilated by Perry, who represents everything it means to come from a broken home.

      Respectfully,
      Brooke Spencer, Pd. 1

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    2. dear burgandi,
      what page did you find that quote on?
      sincerely,
      a hardworking English student

      Delete
  35. Dear Mrs.Carlson,
    I found this passage on page 9 of "In Cold Blood"
    "His wife always slept until as late as possible. However, while Mr.clutter was shaving, showering,and outfitting himself in whipcord trousers, a cattleman's leather jacket, and soft stirrup boots, he had no fear of disturbing her; they did not share the same bedroom. for several years he had slept alone in the master bedroom, on the ground floor of the house".
    I found this passage sort of unusual because normally a man and his wife sleep together in the same room and the same bed. However with Mr. and Mrs. clutter they sleep in separate rooms. i found a device he used was a special kind of imagery. Also he gave a very good description of what exactly happened that day. This isn't my favorite passage but it did catch my eye.
    Respectfully,
    Triston Edmonds

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  36. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In Cold Blood is one of the greatest novels that was based on true events. The author Truman Capote, wrote this novel with a creative technique that no man ever did before. Capote was the one that invented the genre non-fiction. various rhetorical strategies are used throughout the whole novel. A passage that I found interesting in particular is:

    "Dick Hickock! Don't talk to me about Dick Hickock! If ever I met the devil! Steal? Steal the weights off a dead man's eyes! His mother, though, Eunice, she's a fine woman. Heart as big as a barn. His daddy, too. Both of them plain, honest people. Dick would've gone to jail more times than you can count, except nobody around here ever wanted to prosecute. Out of respect for his folks."

    Truman capote uses a motif in the sentence "Steal the weights off a dead man's eyes!", it means death and it recurs throughout the novel . Dick was raised in a good family, with parents who loved him but were a little too naive. There doesn't seem to be anything wrong with his childhood, but he grows up to be a killer and criminal.

    Respectfully,
    Jeric Manzano

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  37. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    One of my favorite passages in In Cold Blood, happens to be very close to the beginning of the first chapter "The Last To See Them Alive", on page 5. "But then, in the earliest hours of that morning in November, a Sunday morning, certain foreign sounds impinged on the normal nightly scrape of scuttling tumbleweed, the racing, receding wail of locomotive whistles. At the time not a soul in sleeping Holcomb heard them- four shotgun blasts that, all told, ended six human lives. But afterward the townspeople, theretofore sufficiently unfearful of each other to seldom trouble to lock their doors, found fantasy re-creating them over and again- those somber explosions that stimulated fires of mistrust in the glare of which many old neighbors viewed each other strangely, and as strangers."
    This passage happens to be one of my favorites because it always gets me thinking about what Capote is trying to get to. Sometimes I'd have to read the passage more than once to understand it, and I enjoy doing that. Every time I reread the passage, I try to decipher any more hidden meanings I could not find before. In the passage above, Capote uses alliteration and diction.
    Capote uses alliteration when describing the Holcomb noises- "scrape of scuttling tumbleweed, the racing, receding wail of locomotive whistles." The sounds of the s's, and the t's are repetitive. Scrape and scuttling. Racing and receding. Also, "Not a soul in sleeping Holcomb". Soul and sleeping.
    Lastly, Capote chooses great words in this passage on Page 5, and in the way he organizes his words and punctuations. In his last sentence "-those somber explosions that stimulated free of mistrust in the glare of which many old neighbors viewed each other strangely, and as strangers." Capote used the words strangely and strangers perfectly, because they both are almost the same word but used in different and similar ways to describe the glare of old neighbors. As if saying, although they've been neighbors for awhile, they view each other strangely as if they were strangers, which they are not.
    The passage on page 5 happens to be one of my favorites, because it sculpts the non-fiction novel right in the beginning. In the first chapter, the setting of Holcomb is introduced to the reader. The last passage before the break shapes the beginning because it starts with Holcomb being described as boring and calm, but the end of halts the impression that Holcomb is now boring and calm; that Holcomb is intro ducted into "foreign sounds" being "impinged on the normal nightly Holcomb noises" by being interrupted by the sounds of four gun shots. This passage changes your mood and reads as a novel.
    Holcomb is no longer calm and boring. Holcomb is now filled with old neighbors who simply no longer trust anyone, because everyone are now strangers.
    Sincerely,

    Jenny Anne Paleracio

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  38. Dear Ms.Carlson,
    Truman Capote truly used all the tools at his disposal to make "In Cold Blood" what it is; a masterpiece. Capote uses a flurry of rhetorical devices and to pick one passage from the book was difficult. This is a simple passage but it feels heavy in the way that I began to see Mrs.Clutter due to Capote's imagery.

    “The mood of misery that descended never altogether lifted; it lingered like a cloud that might rain or might not” (page 27)

    In the book "In Cold Blood", it is explained that after each one of Mrs.Clutter's children were born, she began to become more and more depressed. Capote uses a simile to explain how Mrs.Clutter felt following the birth of her son. The simile shows me that once she became depressed, the mood never left her. I find this passage interesting because usually a person associates a rain cloud, with rain falling on someone below, as a way of showing that the person beneath the rain is sad. Capote describes the cloud as "lingering" and that the cloud may or may not rain. I believe the passage also contains a great deal of imagery as I cannot help but imagine that cloud over Mrs.Clutter's head.

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    1. Dear Kailer

      I never thought to see that quote in such depth, so basically what your saying is Mrs. Clutter's depression is linked to her children being birthed, and in a sense her mood was similar to that of a cloud raining on her, thus being sad. And the worse thing about this cloud is that it continues to linger, much like her depression; a brilliant use of simile that of which i can agree on you with.

      Sincerely,
      Brandon Jenks pd.1

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    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  39. Dear Ms.Carlson,

    Truman Capote uses a variety of rhetorical devices to add diversity to his writing in his non-fiction novel In Cold Blood. One can see that in parts of the novel, the rhetorical devices add certain effects to the plot.

    There were many passages that stood out to me but there is one quote in particular and it's one of the most important rhetorical devices written in the novel. It is in the form of a metaphor: “He and Dick were ‘running a race without a finish line’” (202). At this point in the novel, after being on the run for quite some time, Dick and Perry are worn out mentally and physically. The impact of the murders, although committed in cold blood, has made their lives horrible and unfavorable. Just like a race can become tiring, the murderers’ are running from the law and dodging obstacles along the way.

    Respectfully,
    Angelika Questin
    Pd.2

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    Replies
    1. Dear Angelika,

      I really liked the passage that you chose from the book. The way that Capote says this makes me think that he is not only physically talking about Dick and Perry being on the run, but also mentally, as you have pointed out. He is saying that no matter how long they are being put off of the death penalty and rotting away in jail, those murders will be on their minds always and will stay with them forever.

      Sincerely,
      Nikki Ramos
      Period 1

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  40. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    Within the brilliant, unparalleled non-fiction novel, “In Cold Blood,” intriguing content is displayed on every page and rhetorical strategies are employed in every sentence. Truman Capote wrote and recorded each word with purpose and had the intended effect reached by means of each phrase. The knowledge of the occurrences on that mid-November night in 1959 horrify me, the understanding of the Clutter’s reputation and character sadden me, the awareness of the murderer’s deeds, thoughts and actions frighten me, but the realization of the effect on those who remained alive absolutely haunt me.
    “Bobby began to cry. Larry lingered at the edge of the Teacherage yard, hunched against a tree. He couldn’t remember ever seeing Bobby cry, and he didn’t want to, so he lowered his eyes.” Viewed on page 73 of the novel, these words are a form of torment to me. Mr. Clutter’s associates and Nancy’s friends, along with almost all of the citizens of Holcomb were set in disarray after the Clutter murders. The effect on Bobby Rupp, the “boy with an open, homely-handsome face,” is noteworthy because he was wholly and emotionally attached to one of the victims. Many passages in this intelligent piece of work are fascinating, but none more than the direct impact of the events.
    Bobby crying demonstrates the loss he felt. Larry’s inability to watch his older brother cry proves this loss. Due to the reality of the circumstances Capote put in writing, he needed to exhibit the events as they happened; he did that and more, adding the color to the canvas with his perfect description, imagery, and sentence structure. As a reader, I can see Larry trailing Bobby, not wanting to offend him and completely disregard his previous remarks of “Go away. Go home.” I can visualize Larry keeping adequate distance from Bobby, yet being ready to hold his older brother in his arms at any moment. I can see tears beginning to stain Bobby’s face and I can hear a nearly inaudible whimper. Before the scene closes, I catch sight of Larry- allowing his eyes to rest from the distressing view of his sobbing brother.
    Respectfully,
    Kekai Gonsalves
    Period 2

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    Replies
    1. Dear Kekai,

      I very much agree with your analysis of the passage you chose, my passage was also connected with first hand accounts from close friends of the Clutter family and how truly devastated they were. I also thought that passages such as these are very important in the success of the book. I never felt more sadness whilst reading the book than when I read this passage as well as my own.

      Respectfully,
      Amber Diaz Period 1

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    2. Dear Kekai,
      The passage you chose only showed a glimpse of the emotional reaction to the Cuttlers murders. Another passage in "The Last to see Them Alive" suggests that the Cuttlers were a well loved and important family in Holcomb, making the lose have an even bigger impact on the community. Capotes description of Bobbys reaction to the death of his girlfriend further suggests the novel "In Cold Blood"'s theme as sad and troubled.
      Sincerely,
      Whitney Beck
      Pd2

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  41. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    "But neither Dick's physique nor the inky gallery adorning it made as remarkable an impression as his face, which seemed composed of mismatching parts. It was as though his head had been halved like an apple, then put together a fraction off center. Something of the kind had happened; the imperfectly aligned features were the outcome of a car collision in 1950-an accident that left his long-jawed and narrow face tilted, the left side rather lower than the right, with the results that the lips were slightly aslant, the nose askew, and his eyes not only situated at uneven levels but of uneven size, the left eye being truly serpentine, with a venomous, sickly-blue squint that although it was involuntary acquired, seemed nevertheless to warn of bitter sediment at the bottom of his nature." (31) One of my favorite passages from "In Cold Blood".
    This passage stands out to me because it is so descriptive. Truman Capote shows, through many examples in his book, that he can take such a small part to a whole new level and make it significant and beautifully written. In the passage Capote uses metaphors, similes and imagery to describe the face and the story behind Dick.
    Capote says "it was as though his head had been halved like an apple," he is using a simile and it really helps you to see what his head is shaped like. Capote also uses a metaphor in the passage "the left eye being truly serpentine," these descriptions not only make you see what he looks like but also fear this man in a way. I also like how Capote is so honest in parts of his writing where he doesn't have to be and not only because it is a non-fiction novel.
    In the passage Capote also uses imagery throughout and uses it very well I might add. The way that he describes Dick, it is as if I am looking at this man and staring into his uneven eyes and seeing the story behind his tilted, narrow face.

    Sincerely,
    Nikki Ramos
    Period 1

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  42. Dear Ms Carlson

    " Time weighed upon him, for he had many methods of passing it-among them mirror gazing. Dick had once observed, " Everytime you see a mirror you go into a trance, like. Like you was looking at some gorgeous piece of butt. I mean, my God don't you ever get tired?" Far from it; his own face enthralled him. Each angle of it induced a different impression." Pg. 15

    This passage is helping me to move forward with the novel. When Perry and Dick commited the murder, they were frightened. This passage is telling me that they are worried that eventually they'll get caught. And when they do it'll get ugly. But when he looks in the mirror, he cannot even reconized of what he has become. Constantly he's staring at him self and with each angle he gazed at, he can't see his own reflection. Perry and he altared into different men.

    Sincerely AJ Cummings Pd. 3

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    1. Dear AJ,

      This passage contributes to three themes of this book that I recognize: conflict, contrast, and self-image.
      Dick and perry both lack self-esteem/self-worth, and recognition due to their appearance. Deep down this is the cause in which makes them act out because of anger, perry especially, due to not having achievements, and perry with his motorcycle accident that occurred added to his downfall of an appearance.
      Dick seeks the superiority in order to archive his inner conflicts, and perry is sensitive to criticism and has no control over his emotions, ehich dick knows and takes advantage of. The acts of crime they commit are at the root of their low-self esteem, and in which included the murder of the Clutter family. Its ironic to me that Dick admires himself, for he is just as ugly because he feels nothing happend, and perry is constantly worried about being caught and is ashamed.
      This passage supports the theme of sel-image and conflict in this way.
      This passage also shows how the killers are spending their time, while in holcomb, Bobby Rupp is grieving over the loss of Nancy. The structure of the novel shows comparison to how the time spent and lives of the people involved and impacted are after the Clutter murder. This passage reveals the theme of contrast as the time the killers are spending during this period of time are far different from of those in holcomb.
      The emotional response and engagement from this passage further moves the story along as the reader is now angry with the Dick's attitude lack of care and meaning, and the reader also knows that time is ticking and they will eventually get caught. During this time the reader is anxious/eager to see justice and is more invested into the outcome. The emotional involvement is one thing that makes this a story rather than an article explaining the event.

      Respectfully,
      Jalissa Rapozo-Carveiro

      Delete
  43. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    “The depot itself, with its peeling sulphur-colored paint, is equally melancholy…Up on the highway, there are two filling stations, one of which doubles as a meagerly supplied grocery store, while the other does extra duty as a café–Hartman’s Café, where Mrs. Hartman, the proprietress, dispenses sandwiches, coffee, soft drinks, and 3.2 beer”
    (4)

    Capote seeks to act professional and keep that crime mentality. The picturesque imagery also serves to make the murder all that more grotesque and horrible. Capote commonly incorporates the scene in his book often remarking the natural beauty and the sometimes frightening serenity.

    Sincerely,
    Keliikoa Baclayon Pd. 3

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    Replies
    1. Dear Keliikoa,

      This passage that you liked is a nice one. It sets the tone in which Capote tries to do to make Holcomb Kansas seem boring and dull. Like the part where he mentions of the 3.2 beer in which that means the beer there has less alcohol then a regular beer would have. Capote uses the descriptions to set the setting in which all this occurred so he can advance the plot.

      Respectfully,
      Kalani Murakami period 1

      Delete
    2. Dear Keliikoa,

      I must say, I definitely agree with you that Capote uses imagery. I agree with you when you say that the imagery makes the murder "more grotesque and horrible". It allows us to have a better insight of what actually happened that early morning.

      Respectfully,
      Jonathan Paleka

      Delete
  44. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    The non-fiction novel "In Cold Blood" written by Truman Capote was astonishing in the way Capote was able to turn a murder case into a story appealing to the reader, and in doing this creating a new genre. There was more than one passage that I liked in terms of Rhetorical Strategies which made choosing one to write about somewhat difficult. The way Capote wrote this story explaining the horrid event that occurred in Holcomb, Kansas was written so beautifully, a masterpiece you could say, due to his remarkable use of Rhetorical strategies. Of these that are most effective is the vivid descriptions and imagery, diction, and similes, flashbacks, and foreshadowing.
    My favorite passage clearly shows these Rhetorical strategies at work and was appealing to me as a reader.

    "The four coffins, which quite filled the small, flower-crowded parlor, were to.be sealed at the funeral services--very understandably, for despite the care taken with the appearance of the victims, the effect achieved was disquieting. Nancy wore her dress of cherry-red velvet, her brother a bright plaid shirt; the parents were more sedately attired, Mr. Clutter in navy-blue flannel, his wife in navy-blue crepe; and--and it was this especially that lent the scene an awful aura--the head of each was completely encased in cotton, a swolen cocoon twice the size of an ordinary blown up balloon, and the cotton, because it had been sprayed with glossy substance, twinkled like Christmas-tree snow." (95).

    The way Capote desribes this scene shows the work of imagery and along with it the feelings and emotions that overtake the reader which helps move along the story and engages the reader. By using imagery, Capote allows the reader to see the haunting effects brought about by the murder of this innocent, well-known and loved Clutter Family.

    "Despite the care taken with the appearance of the victims, the effect achieved was disquieting". This demonstrates the fact that murder had occurred and there was no way of fixing it, not even with their appearance which was crutial because it is of remindance that the acts done to this family were brutal.

    The emphasis Capote uses to describe the heads encased in cotton shows how it added to an "awful aura" of this sight. In my opinion, if that were to be people I knew and were close to, I would not want to have that be the last image of the family in my head. The cotton cocoons in which incased the heads were not ordinary and gives an uncomfortable feeling and deep sorrow for what happend to them. And this scene was not ordinary just as it was unordinary for the family to be murdered. To build emotions into explaining this murder case makes this an actual story instead of just something that could be reported in a newspaper article.

    I also noticed that the "dress of cherry-red velvet" Nancy wore was very meaningful as pertaining to her pride in it as she had made it herself, which further adds to explaining Nancy's character, and it triggered a memory for her best friend Susan Kidwell. This was mentioned in Podma's blog entry, which ties into Capote's use of flashback in which works to add to the sadness in this scene. On pg. 56, the night of the murder , Nancy was laying out her clothes for church which included her red velveteen dress, "it was the dress in which she was to be buried". This provides the rhetorical strategy of foreshadowing as it gives an insight of the tragedy that was about to become of her and the rest of her family, and the dress she would soon wear to her grave instead of church the next morning.

    Respectfully,
    Jalissa Rapozo-Carveiro Pd.3

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    1. Dear jalissa,
      Your passage of how the victums were in their coffins moves the story by hooking the readers in telling the story of the horror of what these victums went through, and how they were killed. That even if they were dressed nice and taken cared of their faces had to be covered because of the sadness of this horrible event.
      Respectfully,
      Kristen Yam

      Delete
    2. Dear Jalissa,

      The passage describing Nancy's dress of cherry-red velvet, kind of got to me when I was reading it. It seems like irony that Nancy was making a wonderful dress, only for her to wear it in her own casket, while her face is covered with cotton. That passage ties into the novel by evoking an emotion to readers, like myself.

      Sincerely,
      Jenny Paleracio

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  45. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  46. Dear Mrs. Carlson,
    In the novel "In Cold Blood," with it's veriations of rhetorical stratigies. I liked the passage "Kenyon resembled neither of his parent physically; his crewcut hair was hemp- colored; and he was six feet tall and lanky, though hefty enoughto have once rescued a pair of full grown sheep by carrying them two miles through a blizzard- sturdy, strong, but cursed with a lanky boy's lack of muscular coordination." pg. 38
    Capote also tells us about Kenyon, being able to hunt, and how Kenyon being younger than his friend thought that it was better to do these things like hunt for rabbits then being with girls. he grew up like a typical guy even coming from a small, boring town like Holcombs.
    Capote showes an insight on who Kenyon really is, his looks deceiving who he is, a " sturdy, strong" boy. He uses imagrey and gives an example of how he was hefty enough to carry the pair of sheep, and he uses many detaails to describe Kenyon.
    Respectufully,
    Kristen Yam
    Pd.3

    ReplyDelete
  47. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In the book of "In Cold Blood" by Truman Capote, many rhetorical devices stood out to me as I read through the book. For example this one-


    " A room in a hotel in Mexico City. In the room was an ugly modern bureau with a lavender tinted mirror, and tucked into a corner of the mirror was a printed warning from the management: Su Dia Termina A Las 2P.M Your Day Ends At 2 P.M "


    The passage above really shows the emphases Capote puts on descriptions, between the descriptions of the ugly modern bureau and the lavender tinted mirror, it's almost like I’m standing next to him as he points out everything to me. I found this to be one of Capote’s stronger rhetorical devices, as most of his book is really descriptive just like the beginning throughout the entire introduction of Holcomb and the boringness of it.

    Sincerely,
    Kendra Vega
    Period:3

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    Replies
    1. Dear Kendra,

      I agree regarding the description thou I'd like to add and praise the fact that capote paints us this spectacular picture before he really gets into the story which makes it that more moving and heart felt.
      Capote's use of description mainly to set us up before moving through the story is an idea most authors of that age had no thought about trying.

      Respectfully,
      Shiloh Begley
      Period 3

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    2. Dear Kendra and Shiloh,

      I too agree that the description helps us to "paint a picture" of the story. Capote describes things in such a manner, that it is kind of over whelming. The way he words things to help us see that picture is crazy. When he describes things, like Shiloh said, it is to help set us up for more of the story.

      Respectfully,
      Jonathan Paleka

      Delete
  48. Dear Ms. Carlson,
    Truman Capote uses a lot of picturesque language as well as flashback in order to make the audience feel as if they were in Kansas during the time when the was written. Capote is a truly beautiful and soulful writer, and my favorite passage from his book, "In Cold Blood" is :

    “ Across the street a man was raking leaves. I kept looking at him. Because i didn't want to close my eyes. I thought, if i do I'll faint. So I watched him rake leaves and burn them. Watched, without really seeing him. Because all I could see was the red dress. I knew it so well. I helped her pick the material. It was her own design, and she sewed it herself. I remember how excited she was the first time she wore it. At a party. All I could see was Nancy’s red velvet. And Nancy in it. Dancing”.

    I really felt moved by this passage because of how haunting it seemed, and how I found myself picturing this particular scene playing out. In addition listening to how sorrowful Susan Kidwell, Nancy's best friend, felt as she described this memory she has of Nancy made me think about how I would've felt if it were my best friend that had died. This passage reallys stood out to me due to my emotional reaction to it, as well as how written so beautifully. I believe it was crucial for Capote to add little tid bits and testimonies from close family friends in order to really make his book a master piece.

    Respectfully,
    Amber Diaz Period 1

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    Replies
    1. Dear Amber,
      When reading the Passage you selected, the tone that came to mind was directly aimed at at the emotion of sorrow and wistful. The reason I believe the tone of this particular passage is a sorrowful one is when it states" Watched, without really seeing." Within that sentence I felt the pain sadness of that persons view. The character is so sad that in the previous sentence they say that they don't want to close their eyes. and that they thought, if they did they'd faint.The characters sadness and sorrowfulness is easily seen that they have empty chest as if the wind was knocked right out of them.

      respectfully,
      Shannon Delaney
      period 1

      Delete
  49. Dear Mrs Carlson,
    In Truman Capotes "In Cold Blood" he creates a very real and extreme genre for the reading world which is commonly read today, which are non-fiction books. I believe Capotes main rhetorical strategy throughout his novel was descriptive writing, but also did an excellent job of picturesque language and diction of the true story of the Clutter family murder and being able turning it into a novel.

    My favorite passage within this Novel so far happens to be in the first section of the book, "The Last To See Them Alive", on page 5. "But then, in the earliest hours of that morning in November, a Sunday morning, certain foreign sounds impinged on the normal nightly scrape of scuttling tumbleweed, the racing, receding wail of locomotive whistles. At the time not a soul in sleeping Holcomb heard them- four shotgun blasts that, all told, ended six human lives. But afterward the townspeople, theretofore sufficiently unfearful of each other to seldom trouble to lock their doors, found fantasy re-creating them over and again- those somber explosions that stimulated fires of mistrust in the glare of which many old neighbors viewed each other strangely, and as strangers."

    The reason I chose this passage is because his use of diction is very clearly planted in front of your eyes. When Capote describes the sound of the gun shot he could've used a boring/lame wording, but instead he uses the PERFECT word, which is "impinged" it gave me a better understanding then "happened" or "exploded" would have. Another great sentence within this passage that inflicts diction into one of his writing strategies is,"But afterward the townspeople, theretofore sufficiently unfearful of each other to seldom trouble to lock their doors." Using great choice of wording to describe the passage more throughly.

    This passage Also easily displays it's use of descriptive writing and picturesque writing. "Scrape of scuttling tumbleweed, the racing, receding wail of locomotive whistles. " which is also alliteration. I see that Capote uses descriptive writing when talking about the scrape of the scuttling tumbleweed. it creates a better understanding of the way he views (Picturesques) the Morning of the murder and how the town setting was.

    Respectfully,
    shannon delaney
    period 1

    ReplyDelete
  50. Dear Mrs. Carlson

    "The grim information, announced from church pulpits, distributed over telephone wires, publicized by Garden City's radio station, KIUL("A tragedy unbelievable and shocking beyond words, struck four members of the Herb Clutter family late Saturday night or early today. Death, brutal and without apparent motive..."), produced in the average recipent a reaction nearer that of Mother Truitt than that of Mrs. Clare: amazement, shading into dismay; a shallow horror sensation that cold springs of personal fear swiftly deepened."(70)

    In this passage which stuck to me quiet a bit is a key tranisiton when the everybody else in the story finds out about the horrible death of the clutters. While we, the readers, already knew about it and cant help to feel that solid rock that drops in our body from head to toe. I like Capote's use of metaphors as it gives an idea of the dark heaviness that has befallen the citizens of holocomb. The description in the beginning also puts the readers mind into a sense of panic just like the folks that are hearing it, and if you ever heard of a radio brodcast of a murder its much more realistic and easier to imagine adding even more of an intense effect.

    Respectfully,
    Shiloh Begley
    Period 3

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  51. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    Truman Capote's “In Cold Blood” goes into even the most minute of details to describe a plethora of things, including helping to advance the plot, further developing a character's personality or simply describing the surroundings in a particular setting. My favorite example of this is in a dialogue/flashback on page 110.

    “When Perry asked Dick, “Know what I think?” he knew he was beginning a conversation that would displease Dick, and one that, for that matter, he himself would just as soon avoid. He agreed with Dick: Why go on talking about it? But he could not always stop himself. Spells of helplessness occurred, moments when he “remembered things”–blue light exploding in a black room, the glass eyes of a bit toy bear–and when voices, a particular few words, started nagging in his mind: “Oh, no! Oh, please! No! No! No! No! Don't! Oh, please don't, please!” And certain sounds returned–a silver dollar rolling across a floor, boot steps on hardwood stairs, and the sounds of breathing, the gasps, the hysterical inhalations of a man with a severed windpipe.
    When Perry said, “I think there must be something wrong with us,” he was making an admission he “hated to make.” After all, it was “painful” to imagine that one might be “not just right”–particularly if whatever was wrong was not your own fault but “maybe a thing you were born with.” Look at his family! Look at what had happened there! His mother, an alcoholic, had strangled to death on her own vomit. Of er children, two sons and two daughters, only the younger girl, Barbara, had entered ordinary life, married, begun raising a family. Fern, the other daughter, jumped out of a window of a San Francisco hotel. (Perry had ever since “tried to believe she slipped,” for he'd loved Fern. She was “such a sweet person,” so “artistic,” a “terrific” dancer, and she could sing, too. “If she'd ever had any luck at all, with her looks and all, she could have got somewhere, been somebody.” It was sad to think of her climbing over a window sill and falling fifteen floors.) And there was Jimmy, the older boy–Jimmy, who had one day driven his wife to suicide and killed himself the next”

    Capote connects emotionally with his audience by bringing about a tragedy, a boy from a broken home, whose siblings, almost all of which, never led a full life. And what has he become? The boy has become the housebreaker, tearing apart families–the latest of which–to death.

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  52. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    In the story, “In Cold Blood” written by Truman Capote, the rhetorical device that caught my attention was the way he used imagery. “It was ideal apple-eating weather; the whitest sunlight descended from the purest sky, and an easterly wind rustled, without ripping loose, the last of the leaves on the Chinese elms” (10).

    His use of imagery is outstanding. While I read the book and especially this sentence, Capote seems to be involving me into his story. He puts it in a way that we can relate to, to be able to get a better picture of what is going on. When he talks about the Clutter family or describing to us the scene or plot, pictures are just invading my head. I am able to see what Holcomb Kansas looks like. I’m able to see the flat land with all the horses and cows. I’m able to see the Clutter family. His choice of words and the way he uses imagery definitely captures all who read the book.

    Respectfully,
    Jonathan Paleka

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  53. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    When reading Truman Capotes non-fiction novel, "In Cold Blood", I became engrossed within the stylistic language as well as rhetorical strategies he so eloquently laid out for us. His use and layout of words helps to paint rich pictures in the reader’s heads as well as conjure emotions within them.
    One of the more intriguing passages from this novel would have to be, “Perry had on several occasions run off, set out to find his lost father, for he had lost his mother as well, learned to 'despise' her; liquor had blurred the face, swollen the figure of the once sinewy, limber Cherokee girl, had 'soured her soul', honed her tongue to the wickedest point, so dissolved her self-respect that generally she did not bother to ask the names of the stevedores and trolley-car conductors and such persons who accepted what she offered without charge... Consequently, as Perry recalled, 'Lu was always thinking about Dad, hoping he could come take me away..."
    With this passage, Capote uses the rhetorical device of flashback and recollects Perry’s childhood memory of his mother and his ghost of a father. It describes the troubled childhood that Perry had, and gives reason as to why he is the criminal he is today. The passage builds sympathy towards Perry, and leads reason for readers to pity Perry.

    Respectfully,
    Brooke Spencer

    ReplyDelete
  54. Dear Ms.Carlson

    In the novel "In Cold Blood" The two rhectorial stratagies that really stood out to me that Truman Capote uses alot of in his writing would be imagery and description. My favorite passage from the book "In Cold Blood" is:

    " The village of Holcomb stands on the high wheat plains of western Kansas, a lonesome area that other Kansans call "out there." Some seventy miles east of the Colorado border, the countryside, with its hard blue skies and desert-clear air, has an atmosphere that is rather more Far West than Middle West."

    As soon as I started reading this passage you could already tell that Holcomb was a boring, low key like community. This passage really stood out to me because there was so much description and details that Truman Capote uses in this passage. I could really picture what Holcomb, Kansas looked and how it was like from Capotes point of view.

    Sincerely,
    Kanani Colburn
    Period 3




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  55. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    My favorite passage of "In Cold Blood" is the conversation Perry and Dick have discussing their dreams. Capote uses Flashback of a dream and imagery and details

    "That was a riddle that Perry had pondered. He felt he'd solve it, but the solution, while simple, was also somewhat hazy; "No. Because once something is set to happen, all you can do is hope it won't. Or will-- depending. As long as you live, theres always something waiting, and even if its bad, and you know its bad, what can you do? You can't stop living. Like my dream. Since I was a kid, I've been this same dream... ...Feet first. Like going down in quicksand." Perry hesitated. He could not help noticing that Dick, busy gouging under his finger nails with a fork prong, was uninterested in his dream."

    This passage stood out to me because it explained Perry and Dick's relationship, especially how Perry was. Capote used these dreams as flashbacks because they meant so much to Perry and they occurred so many times. Also because it was memories and moments that were reoccurring so many times in Perry's life, or in Perry's dreams. It meant so much to Perry that he was now sharing it with his accomplice Dick. Which Capote also used as imagery and details by writing what Perry told Dick of his dream and all the details that made up the image Perry had of his dream.

    Sincerely,
    Shianne Schorr
    Period 2

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  56. Dear Ms. Carlson,

    The passage I choose from Capote's "In Cold Blood" is the following below:

    "It was just after midnight, and the warehouse was lit up like a Halloween pumpkin. The doors wide open. We could see the witnesses, a lot of guards, and the warden - every damn thing but the gallows. It was off at an angle, but we could see it's shadow. A shadow on the wall like the shadow of a boxing ring."

    This passage really stood out to me because of Capote's in depth detail of description. Right from the beginning you could see that Capote's strongest rhetorical strategy was indeed Description. The way he mentions the way he couldnt see the gallows, as they were at a angle but a shadown could be seen. It's like your standing there next to him, as he paints this picture into your mind. Capote uses this rhetorical strategy alot, description played a big part of the beginning of the novel as it introduced Holcomb a dull, tedious place.

    Sincerely,
    Ashlie Overmyer
    Period: 3
    Repost..

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