Capote (Magill’s Literary Annual 1991-2005)

At a glance:

If, as Truman Capote (originally Truman Streckfus Persons) alleged, he invented the nonfiction novel, Gerald Clarke's enormous, meticulously researched Capote: A Biography exemplifies the genre, the actual origins of which some literary scholars dispute. Clarke's book, clearly a documented nonfiction account, reads like a novel, perhaps because Capote's life unfolds like an intricately contrived fiction. Even its duller periods, for which Capote manufactured events and stories to gloss over the banalities, sparkle with the sheer invention of Capote's gnomish mind at work.

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