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July 28th, 2006
Truman Capote
About the Author

Failure is the condiment that gives success its flavor.
Capote

Throughout his career, Truman Capote remained one of America’s most controversial and colorful authors, combining literary genius with a penchant for the glittering world of high society. Though he wrote only a handful of books, his prose styling was impeccable, and his insight into the psychology of human desire was extraordinary. His flamboyant and well-documented lifestyle has often overshadowed his gifts as a writer, but over time Capote’s work will outlive the celebrity.

Born in New Orleans in 1924, Capote was abandoned by his mother and raised by his elderly aunts and cousins in Monroeville, Alabama. As a child he lived a solitary and lonely existence, turning to writing for solace. Of his early days Capote related, “I began writing really sort of seriously when I was about eleven. I say seriously in the sense that like other kids go home and practice the violin or the piano or whatever, I used to go home from school every day and I would write for about three hours. I was obsessed by it.”

In his mid-teens, Capote was sent to New York to live with his mother and her new husband. Disoriented by life in the city, he dropped out of school, and at age seventeen, got a job with The New Yorker magazine. Within a few years he was writing regularly for an assortment of publications. One of his stories, “Miriam,” attracted the attention of publisher Bennett Cerf, who signed the young writer to a contract with Random House. Capote’s first book, Other Voices, Other Rooms, was published in 1948. Other Voices, Other Rooms received instant notoriety for its fine prose, its frank discussion of homosexual themes, and, perhaps most of all, for its erotically suggestive cover photograph of Capote himself.

With literary success came social celebrity. The young writer was lionized by the high society elite, and was seen at the best parties, clubs, and restaurants. He answered accusations of frivolousness by claiming he was researching a future book. His short novel, Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1958), took much of its inspiration from these experiences. With the publication of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the subsequent hit film staring Audrey Hepburn, Capote’s popularity and place among the upper crust was assured. His ambition, however, was to be great as well as popular, and so he began work on a new experimental project that he imagined would revolutionize the field of journalism.

In 1959, Capote set about creating a new literary genre — the non-fiction novel. In Cold Blood (1966), the book that most consider his masterpiece, is the story of the 1959 murder of the four members of a Kansas farming family, the Clutters. Capote left his jet-set friends and went to Kansas to delve into the small-town life and record the process by which they coped with this loss. During his stay, the two murderers were caught, and Capote began an involved interview with both. For six years, he became enmeshed in the lives of both the killers and the townspeople, taking thousands of pages of notes. Of In Cold Blood, Capote said, “This book was an important event for me. While writing it, I realized I just might have found a solution to what had always been my greatest creative quandary. I wanted to produce a journalistic novel, something on a large scale that would have the credibility of fact, the immediacy of film, the depth and freedom of prose, and the precision of poetry.” In Cold Blood sold out instantly, and became one of the most talked about books of its time. An instant classic, In Cold Blood brought its author millions of dollars and a fame unparalleled by nearly any other literary author since.

To celebrate the book’s success, Capote threw what many called the “Party of the Century,” the famous “Black and White Ball.” This masked ball, at New York’s elegant Plaza Hotel, was to be the pinnacle of both his literary endeavors and his popularity. Overwhelmed by the lifestyles of the rich and famous, Capote began to work on a project exploring the intimate details of his friends. He received a large advance for a book which was to be called Answered Prayers (after Saint Theresa of Avila’s saying that answered prayers cause more tears than those that remain unanswered). The book was to be a biting and largely factual account of the glittering world in which he moved. The publication of the first few chapters in Esquire magazine in 1975 caused a major scandal. Columnist Liz Smith explained, “He wrote what he knew, which is what people always tell writers to do, but he just didn’t wait till they were dead to do it.”

With these first short publications Capote found that many of his close friends and acquaintances shut him off completely. Though he claimed to be working on Answered Prayers (which many imagined would be his greatest work), the shock of the initial negative reactions sent him into a spiral of drug and alcohol use, during which time he wrote very little of any quality. When Capote died in 1984, at the age of fifty-nine, he left behind no evidence of any continued progress on Answered Prayers. Though many feel that Capote did not live up to the promise of his early work, it is clear from what he did write that he was an artist of exquisite talent and vision. With both his fiction and his non-fiction, he created a body of work that will continue to move readers and inspire writers for years.

(76 votes)
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51 Responses to “About the Author”
  1. Trudie says:

    Why was Capotes book ‘In Cold Blood’ banned in some American states?

  2. niikie says:

    who wrote this article?

  3. Erika says:

    Who wrote this article?

  4. john burns says:

    he is a sexy beast

  5. Bel says:

    I read and seen the screen movie of capote. I just find it hard to believe that a man of his nature would come out to the world in those times and was found to be accepted by society. Mind you he is one of the greatest authors of his time and he brought about a new style of writing, but all in all I just find it hard to believe is all.

  6. Julie says:

    Who wrote this

  7. Jack says:

    i like how those glasses bring out his eyes

  8. Nate says:

    Ever wonder what happened to the Clutter house in Holcomb, KS? See the story on Examiner.com

  9. JoAnne says:

    He remains very popular to those of us who admired his writing and never cared with whom he slept.

  10. BLAHDY BLAHDY BLAH!! says:

    WHO WROTE THiS DANG ARTiCLE?!?!?! iT HELPS TO BE ABLE TO FiND THE AUTHOR WHEN WRiTiNG A RESEARCH PAPER.. SO THANKS FOR ALL THE HELP.. NOT!!!!!

  11. Annoyed Girl says:

    it does help to be able to find the author when writing a research paper, also the date that this was publised…..

  12. Cristina says:

    Why fail to mention how Capote screwed over Harper Lee in writing his book In Cold Blood? If it were not for her, the novel would not have been written on time, nor would he have been able to gain access to the families or police detectives on the case as the people in Kansas were not impressed with Capote’s style or personality.

  13. katie says:

    yo man who wrote thisss?

  14. jenna says:

    nerds

  15. researcher says:

    Can somebody from PBS please post the author of this page. For many of the commenters we need the author’s name to cite this source in a bibliography for a paper. It would be extremely helpful.

  16. researcher says:

    Can somebody from PBS please post the author of this page. For many of the commenters we need the author’s name to cite this source in a bibliography for a paper. It would be extremely helpful.

  17. SEXAY says:

    DDDDDDDDDDDAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYUUUUUUUMMMMMMMM

    hes fine

  18. lorina says:

    i like all the books truman capote wrote i just cant find the favorite book he wrote in cold blood

  19. killer says:

    he is retarded and stupid

  20. me says:

    UUUUUUHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!! hes hidious hes like 890 years old !!!!!!!EEEEEEEWWWWWWWW!!!!! people should get a life and stop calling an ugly old man lots of things soooooooo dont!!!

  21. mikeila .w. says:

    hey, me loves the stuff gtg by.

  22. Renee says:

    This is a very interesting article, tho I am only reading this out of Requirement of my teacher. V-V i hate school

  23. ******** says:

    He is a good author

  24. the wanderer says:

    he surely can keep a straight face!!!!

  25. hello says:

    I agree with sexay

  26. ryan wgjhg says:

    ya he is

  27. Ebony and Ivory says:

    MMMMMMMM that old man ain’t fine at all. he is dead y’alllllllllllll.

    who wrote this?
    who wrote this?
    who wrote this?

    WHY DON’T Y’ALL JUST MAKE UP SOMEONE????? wut yo teacher don’t kno won’t hurt her!

  28. onomatopeia says:

    oh interesting

  29. Cody Furbish says:

    Truman sounds like he was a very brilliant man, I would have like to meat him. I think I would enjoy some of his books and stories.

  30. crazyidot says:

    aahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh let me out of here

  31. Morgan says:

    who wrote this dang thing?

  32. Silly Willy says:

    Guys, I know its annoying, but you CAN do a bibliography if theres not author or date, you just ommit them.

  33. michaela says:

    i think that truman capote is a great writer and he writes about alot of crazy stuff

  34. brady says:

    hes a weirdo i watched his little movie. hes a sexy beast

  35. ..... says:

    your all right, he is a freak..but, his books are amazing..it took him years to write “In Cold Blood”..but, it one of my favorites.

  36. Ocean7 says:

    I agree with Silly Willy; you can cite references from the internet if the author is not stated. I think you use the site link or something, plus any info (like PBS) that helps identify the piece.

    This site has a feedback option below, has anyone tried to contact the site maintance peeps for info?

    Love Capote’s work. I would like to read that article from Esquire “La Cote Basque, 1965″ and see what all the alledged scandal was about.

  37. josh says:

    i agree you make a good point

  38. Sarah says:

    He’s not a freak.

    You guys are all just upset because he was gay.

  39. Maddie says:

    can i get an author on who wrote this ? thankss

  40. Anu says:

    Remember, every brilliant writer that brings something new to litterature is allways a freak in some point of view.

  41. Michael says:

    I read the comments on this site, and there is no danger of Capote being challenged by this group. While he was writing and reading before he entered the 1st grade, this group’s collection of “deep analytical remarks” is a commentary on the sad state of intelligence, education, and any semblance of thought among Americans today. My God, are we in trouble.

  42. THE UNIT! says:

    I wrote this. boo-ya

  43. Adam says:

    I agree with michael. You all are idiots. You can omit an author from a source and most of you seem more concerned with how he looks than his writing (which I’m assuming is why you’re here in the first place). But unlike michael I think it’s kind of funny reading all of your dumb-ass comments and seeing just how stupid people can really be.

  44. Basil MCormick says:

    Capote was great. he was urbane; his wit was great & original!

  45. Barb says:

    Does any one know if it’s true that Perry Smith left everything he owned to Truman Capote when he was executed for his part in murdering the Clutter family? If so,does any one know what happened to it all or is there a Truman Capote museum any where that would have any of this on display?

  46. sam says:

    u all r mean. u shouldn’t get on someone’s case just because they’re trying to do thorough research. Who cares if they want to know who wrote this thing?

  47. me says:

    im at school right now….and this is boring…
    ….DX

  48. Pamela Harvey says:

    He was a genius of a writer! Loved his short stories and I have a leather bound copy of “In Cold Blood’ a masterpiece

  49. gingerlord says:

    He is a very kind and well-rounded gentleman who only pursues and grants happiness. :)

  50. Chickn FuKA says:

    I love this man!!

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