In Cold Blood
1966 · Truman Capote · 343 pages · Nonfiction
Truman Capote's account of the 1959 Clutter family murders in Holcomb, Kansas, essentially invented the true crime genre as we know it, and sixty years later, it remains the standard against which all true crime writing is measured. The prose is flawless, the structure is masterful, and Capote's portraits of the killers are so detailed and empathetic that they still generate ethical debate. Whether you see it as a landmark of American literature or a brilliantly manipulative exercise in literary journalism, there's no denying its power or its influence.