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Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story by Kim Powers
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Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story

by Kim Powers

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75782,510 (3.48)9
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Carroll & Graf (2007), Hardcover, 256 pages

Member:annaeccentric
Collections:Your libraryRating:***
Tags:fiction
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Capote in Kansas tells the story of two childhood friends, Truman Capote and Harper Lee, who investigated the slaughter of the Clutter family together but eventually severed all ties. It begins with Capote making a late-night call to Lee, known as Nelle, to say he is being tormented by the ghost of Nancy Clutter. He hasn't spoken to Nelle in years. What follows is an eccentric tale of the end of Capote's life, the ghosts that haunt both him and Nelle, and the creepy snake boxes Capote assembles and has delivered to Nelle. Nelle must determine who is sending her these odd packages and why, and the snake boxes spark memories from their childhood and their trip to Kansas to research the Clutter murders. Why have the Clutters come back to haunt them? Did Harper Lee really pen To Kill a Mockingbird? And why does she never write another book? These are just some of the questions Powers raises in Capote in Kansas.

Powers expertly created a fictional story about two very real, very famous people. The book flows seamlessly from the past to the present, and he made the characters come to life on the page.

more ( )
  annaeccentric | Jul 17, 2009 |
There was something very different about the style of this book, but I couldn’t put my finger on exactly what it was. Perhaps it was a mix of Truman Capote and the fear and desperation Nelle felt as strange things began to happen to her after Truman’s midnight call. Whatever it was, it worked for me. I definitely prefered Nelle’s periods of narration to the narration of Truman’s housekeeper, but it was all well done. My very favorite parts of the story were Nelle’s rememberings of her youth, including the time in Kansas with Truman and the writing of The Book (”To Kill A Mockingbird”). Perhaps the most interesting aspect was the slight exploration of the rumor that Capote was the real author of “To Kill A Mockingbird.”

I really enjoyed this book. Powers writes in a way that those who have never read “In Cold Blood” or even “To Kill A Mockingbird” can still understand what is going on, but I would recommend reading both before reading “Capote in Kansas,” as I think it will help with appreciation of this interesting novel.

For the full review:
http://www.devourerofbooks.com/2008/1... ( )
  DevourerOfBooks | Nov 10, 2008 |
There are times when fate conspires to bring two people together only to tear them apart. This is true of Nelle Harper Lee and Truman Capote. Truman’s mother, who had no time or interest in her eccentric son, sent him to live with his family in Monroeville, Alabama. Nelle grew up next door. She was not blind to his idiosyncrasies. in fact, she understood and cared for him like no one else. Nelle was there for him to type up his stories when they were children and to help him connect with people in Kansas while he worked on In Cold Blood. Their bond, however, was not indestructible. Although they complement each other in many ways, it is the ways in which they are alike that drives a wedge between them. It was a distance that might only be bridged by the ghosts from their past.

There is much to love about this novel, but what struck me the most was the impact that writing about another person can have on both the author and the subject. Truman Capote was most definitely in search of fame when he made the decision to write about the Clutter family after their tragic and brutal murders in Kansas. He was haunted by their ghosts later in life because they did not want the attention In Cold Blood brought to them, even though they were deceased at the time. Lee, on the other hand, wrote her neighbor into To Kill a Mockingbird in the form of Boo Radley as a tribute to him. His family never understood her intentions and blamed her for the disruptions her fans made in his life. Whether a depiction is fictional or biographical, putting a person down on paper proved to be the equivalent of stealing that person’s soul. That Lee was sensitive to this from the beginning while Capote didn’t start confronting it until his work became responsible for his being ostracized from New York society - and even then not fully until it was forced upon him as his life was in a downward spiral - that fleshes these characters out fully. By choosing to explore this theme within a novel about two of the most famous and influential American authors in recent time makes this novel fresh, engaging, and memorable.

Although I had read To Kill a Mockingbird prior to reading Capote in Kansas, I knew very little about Lee or Capote when I opened this novel. I did not know about their friendship or that there was a rift tore them apart. In the novel, Capote and his actions were responsible for their estrangement, but it wouldn’t have happened at all were it not for the personal and professional insecurities of they both shared. I found this story fascinating, especially as Powers told it from within the context of the midnight phone calls, the memories, and the ghosts who visited them both in the middle of the night. Whatever the reality of their friendship may have been, I left this novel hoping that they were able to make peace with each other before Capote’s death.

I read this novel over the course of a single day. It was interesting and compelling throughout. It was with satisfaction that I finished the novel and closed the back cover. It’s clear from his writing that Powers’ respects his characters and is compassionate yet honest when dealing with their flaws. I found that it was not necessary to have much knowledge of Lee and Capote to be swept up by their star crossed friendship and to experience their pain as life, love, and childhood loyalties do not work out as they had planned. Despite some potential spoilers about the Clutter family and their killers found within Capote in Kansas, I’m now genuinely interested in reading Capote’s most famous work. I typically avoid books about real-life murders because they get under my skin and give me nightmares. Now, I am curious to see what more it might reveal about him. I have no regrets.

http://literatehousewife.wordpress.co... ( )
  LiterateHousewife | Oct 29, 2008 |
Capote in Kansas by Kim Powers takes a lot of chances. Recreating the lives of not one but two well known and well respected American writers and dealing with subject matter that has not only been covered by others, but covered very well. It is to Mr. Powers great credit that he pulls it off, giving readers an entertaining and haunting experience by telling us a story we already think we know.

Capote in Kansas is the story of Truman Capote and Harper Lee, their difficult lifelong relationship, their time together in Kansas researching In Cold Blood and how the subject of their research continued to haunt them long after the book was published.

Towards the end of his life, Truman Capote, who spends most of the novel at his home in Palm Springs with only his maid,- Myrtle and a plumber he is infatuated with, has begun to fell the presence of Nancy Clutter's ghost. (Nancy Clutter was one of four family members whose vicious murder became the subject for Capote's non-fiction novel In Cold Blood.) Capote never wrote anything of substance again and ended up isolated from most of his friends and acquaintances. In Mr. Powers' novel, he seems to regret this situation which is probably what causes him to think Nancy Clutter's ghost is haunting him. Capote calls Harper Lee in the middle of the night, frantic with fear convinced that Nancy Clutter has come back from the dead to seek revenge on him for exploiting her life and her murder.

Harper Lee, Capote's childhood friend, currently lives with her sister in their family home in Mississippi. She also never published anything after the success of her first novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, which come out shortly after In Cold Blood, and has only recently begun to appear at public functions. In Mr. Powers' novel she is also haunted, by the Clutters, by memories of her deceased brother whom she writes letters to, by the real man Boo Radley was based on, and by her now failed friendship with Truman.

Both people emerge as fully formed, believable characters in Mr. Powers' novel. I was initially skeptical about this, I usually avoid fictionalized stories like this one, but after a few chapters I was hooked. Truman Capote was nothing if not interesting, and Harper Lee continues to fascinate if only by her absence, so Capote in Kansas can easily give the reader a sense of gaining insider knowledge. Some of this is a bit prurient at first, but by the end of the novel, I felt that I had come to understand the situation and the characters. The attempt to reconcile a long lost friendship, to apologize for things said and left unsaid, gives the book a human touch that would have otherwise been lost in the somewhat sordid details of Truman Capote's end as interesting as those details are. Mr. Powers' book serves as an attempt to bring both Capote and Lee back into the fold, so to speak. I think he succeeds.

It certainly must be said that the story of In Cold Blood and its creation is simply a fascinating one. Two effete southerners from New York City head off to the Kansas prairie and try to meet and interview just about everyone in town. I still find it difficult to believe that they pulled it off. Through both character's flashbacks we see several scenes of their time in Kansas including the night Truman took several locals out to dinner and then dancing at what must have been the only drag bar in Kansas much to Harper's chagrin. The fact that it's so hard to believe only makes it more believable. ( )
  CBJames | Oct 13, 2008 |
Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story by Kim Powers is a fictional account of the relationship between Truman Capote and Harper Lee. The book opens over twenty years after the publication of In Cold Blood with Truman being haunted by the ghost of Nancy Clutter. Even though he hadn’t spoken to Nelle (Harper Lee) in twenty years, he calls her in the middle of the night. From there, the book explores their relationship from childhood to Truman’s death. It also delves into the affect writing and researching the book In Cold Blood had on their relationship and on them individually. At one point, Nelle wondered, “What had happened to them in Kansas? Had those murders so sapped them they didn’t have anything left over to put on the page?” Capote in Kansas also examines the controversy surrounding the authorship of To Kill a Mockingbird.

Of course, this is a work of fiction. In an author’s note at the back of the book, Kim Powers explains how he came to write the book and the research he undertook in preparation for writing it. So, while this book is fiction, much of it is based on real events. The thoughts and emotions of the characters are all imagined, though.

I am a fan of both Truman Capote and Harper Lee and their writing, so I found this to be a fascinating, page-turning read. I do wonder if someone who is unfamiliar with them would enjoy the book as much as I did. ( )
  bermudaonion | Oct 10, 2008 |
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For Jess, as always... And in loving memory of Frieda Badian Goldstein
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0786720336, Hardcover)

Truman Capote and Harper Lee were children when they met. Twenty-five years later, Capote had taken New York's literary world by storm, while Lee struggled to put pen to paper and sweat out the story of her childhood in the same city. They would reunite in the desolate plains of Kansas to create In Cold Blood. And they would start talk of an even greater mystery: What happened between them — and who really wrote To Kill a Mockingbird? How did two innocents from a backwoods Southern town achieve such fame, and why did they stop speaking to one another? Kim Powers has conjured a death-bed confession from Capote, in which he picks up the phone to Harper Lee one last time to tell her is being haunted — a tale she doesn't believe, until she is forced to. What do the ghosts of the Clutters want, as they appear one by one to confess their secrets and their anger to the most unlikely mediums of Capote and Lee? Capote in Kansas is an unforgettable "what might have been" — a fantasia of ghosts seeking resolve and revenge, and memories and regret for a past that was, that will never be again.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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