The fifth edition of Persian translation of Persian translation of the 1966 novel “IN COLD BLOOD” by the scriptwriter Truman Caporties, a novelist in the United States, is recently published.
Tehran’s Amir Kabir publication is a book publisher translated by Bahereh Rasekh.
In Cold Blood, in November 1959, it captured the miserable story of the murder of a clatter family in Holcom, Kansas, and fused the border between journalism and literature in a groundbreaking way.
This book created by Caporties is often told as a shrinkage of the genre of “new journalism”. Capote was built to explain his innovative non -fiction novel approach.
The other author had previously challenged a similar area, but the caporties’s delicacy and persuasive story style solidified “cold -blooded” as a typical example of this literary format.
This book was originally continuous in New Yorkers before the release of some successful works of Capote, before it was released as a completely novel in 1965. However, the wide six -year research and writing process will give Caporties a personal blow, and will release additional works after the release that ultimately led him to refrain from him.
The story develops mainly on the tragic death of Kenyon and Nancy, a child of the Clatter and his teens. In a brutal crime that shocked a small community, it was discovered that the messy family was tied and shot in their house.
Caporties noticed this terrible event through the New York Times report, was intrigued by the shocking nature, and traveled to Holcom even before the murderer was arrested. His research was supported by his friend Harper Lee. He later gained the reputation of her classic novel “To Kill a Mockingbird”.
The murderer, Dick Hickok and Perry Smith, initially avoided the capture, leaving the minimum clues, and did not show any personal connections with the messy family.
Throughout the text, Capote digs into their motives, especially the spirit of Perry’s problem. His insufficient emotions, and a turbulent childhood that RES in the world. While Dick embodies the image of a crime, he has been too imposed on their actions and keeps his motivation in ambiguous.
The aftermath of the murder of the Clatter family has a significant impact on Holcom residents, including Nancy’s close friends and acquaintances. The community struggles to harmonize the cognition of the clatter as the “most likely” murder victim, and fosters a wide range of fears and delusions that are eroded between neighbors.
Al Dewy, the chief investigator in the case, is absorbed in exploring to reveal the truth, so that the case can consume his life.
As the anxiety appears in Holcom, Perry and Dick continue to take on the challenge of Mexico and continue their lives with a deception. For a while, they may completely escape justice.
However, the survey is ultimately helped by living witnesses and physical evidence that connect them to criminal sites, including the property stolen from the clatter.
When arrested, both men confess their role in vicious acts. They were sentenced to trial a few years later in a prisoner, convicted and declared. Through their imprisonment, Perry, especially Perry, begins to share his most inner thoughts and motivation, sheds light on his life decisions and the complexity of the fateful night of murder.
“IN COLD BLOOD” offers not only the terrible true crime story, but also a detailed investigation of human psychology, the dark bottom of the United States, and the deep impact on the community and individuals.
SAB/