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I started reading the daily paper around the age of six, and got in trouble for saying out loud "hey, Tricky Dicky!" when my first grade teacher handed around the issue of "My Weekly Reader" with the newly inaugurated president on the cover. And even he had that overripe-tomato look about him.
My doing a book report on “In Cold Blood” at age 10 sparked a minor controversy. The teacher, who obviously hadn’t read the book, apparently thought it inappropriate for a person my age.
My mother had given me the book after reading it herself. She didn’t think it inappropriate, of course.
Whatever one thinks of Truman Capote’s methods and character (he played fast and loose, for sure, with his subjects and with the facts), he was a master of the straightforward literary style. Nothing hifalutin about it. Any 10-year-old reading at grade level can get through his prose without much of a strain. And “In Cold Blood” changed how true crime stories are told.
I’ve since read it (and most of Capote’s other work) in whole or in part several times, to recharge my batteries, to remind myself to get out of my own way and just tell the ********* story.
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