After reading this chapter, I can only say that the world is really weird - perhaps crazy. First, when thinking that love may actually be the key to killing, it is very troubling - 'love' itself may be the root of the motive of murder. Whenever I saw the news about intimacy or family related killings on TV, it surprised me and wondered how they could do that kind of thing. But in any case, I have people doing this to conceal my spouse, people for money, people for authority (family status), and some people who draw attention.
In Truman Capote's non-fiction novel "Cold Blood", clutter family murderers Perry Smith and Dick Hickock were exposed in an unprecedented way. Novels allow the reader to experience intimate understanding of the murderer's past, thoughts and emotions. It details Smith and Hickcock's past. And it helps to explain the way of life to their murder and the idea of ​​penetrating their thoughts after the murder. Perry Smith
A convicted killer. Richard Eugene Hickock was born in Kansas City, Kansas on June 6, 1931. Perry Smith was born in Huntington, Nevada on 27th October 1928. On November 15, 1959, Richard Hick Rock and Perry Smith killed four members of the Claude family at their Kansas farm. Murderers, their victims, and crime were the subject of the 1966 best-selling book "Cold Blood" written by Truman Capote. Two criminals encountered in Kansas State Prison in 1958. From their backgrounds, they seem unlikely. Hickcock grew up on a farm near Kansas City. He was very strong and very popular and graduated from high school in 1949. But his family did not have the money to go to college. This disappointment superseded the bigger tragedy in 1950. That year, he suffered a head injury in a car accident, which made his face a little unbalanced, and his eyes became uneven.