In 1966, gay thor Tman Capote helped birth a new form of journalism wh In Cold Blood, his acunt of the btal slayg of a Kansas fay by
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WHERE ARE YVETTE AND DORIS GAY NOW?
Norman Mailer said Capote wrote the bt sentenc of any wrer of his generatn, so I suppose we n assume that Capote put exactly as much gay text, and subtext, as he wanted to. * in cold blood gay *
And yet the early appearance of the two men who orchtrate the killgs -- Dick and Perry -- tells that their rpective (and llective) stori is what Capote wants to really Capote's other books, Breakfast at Tiffany's (1958) and Other Voic, Other Rooms (1948), a gay male is (passively) prent -- more often than not, a stand- for the thor himself. It was if Capote enjoyed placg himself his works; afford him a closer timacy to his subjects as well as givg a mouthpiece to the queer male, someone so often stigmatised and shamed by society or badly portrayed only pulp novels given out brown paper an age when sodomy laws were enforced across Ameri and homosexualy was nsired a perverse mental illns, Capote ed his stori ( part) to give a voice to gay men.
Whether was about acceptg one's burgeong homosexualy, as the pre-teen protagonist do Other Voic, or perhaps actg as the loyal and non-sexual "brotherly" nfidante to the self-stctive and wayward impuls of the young "geisha" Holly Golightly Tiffany's, Capote's wrg was an important terventn to the Amerin lerary non of male 's sistence reprentg the story and "voic" of queer characters was a signifint achievement an otherwise un-mentnable age of homosexualy.
Fifty years later, and re-readg In Cold Blood our age of gay marriage and queer theory, is hard not to tect the emotnal and erotic tensns between Dick and Perry beyond the novel's early tellg of the gome before the pal crime tak place, Capote creat important and liberate ntrasts between the two "upl" at the centre of the story.
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A ld prevalent the gay muny triggered by the dissolutn of Pri Month" name="Dcriptn" property="og:scriptn * in cold blood gay *
" Perry still tells Dick "you have a wonrful se" as when Dick smirks his face realigns to a more symmetril some may be drawn to the novel's blendg of the dictums of fictn wh the eye of the journalist, others (like myself) are trigued by Capote's sistence showg the homoerotic tensn between the two men.