WHEN TRUMAN CAPOTE'S LIES CAUGHT UP WITH HIM [View all]
On october 21, 1970, truman capote went to jail. Considering hed spent much of his life fascinated by crime, it nevertheless came as a shock, to him and others, when he was sentenced to three days on a contempt-of-court charge. I've been in thirty or forty jails and prisons, but this is the first time Ill ever be in one as a prisoner, Capote told reporters at the time, his bravado a substitute, according to his biographer Gerald Clarke, for the stark terror he was actually feeling.
Every true-crime writer has to contend with Capote. In Cold Blood, his rapturously received nonfiction novel (as Capote termed it) about a Kansas familys homicide in 1959, is embedded in the DNA of every book in the genre. As Justin St. Germain wrote in his critical reexamination, Capote spiked a vein, and out came a stream of imitators, a whole bloody genre, one of the most popular forms of American nonfiction: true crime. (Im no exception, as Capote ended up a minor character in my own recent nonfiction book, Scoundrel.)
https://www.theatlantic.com/books/archive/2023/01/truman-capote-true-crime-in-cold-blood/672747/