Sunday, March 6, 2016
TOW #20: IRB Post
In the first half of the book entitled Blood Will Out: The True Story of A Murder, A Mystery, and A Masquerade, Walter Kirn, the author and main character of the plotline, goes back to the summer of 1998 where he befriended the modern day monster known as Clark Rockefeller. What started as a Kirn simply selling his three-legged dog from his home in Montana to New York City to give the dog to Rockefeller , turned into a 15 year friendship between the two. Clark Rockefeller was a strange man who claimed to be a banker and an art collector, inheriting most of his wealth from his family past as one of the wealthiest families in American History. Written in past tense, Kirn tells his story of his encounters with rockefeller as past experiences, making the audience initially aware of Rockefeller’s true identity: A serial imposter, murderer, and Child kidnapper by the name of Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter. By doing this, Walter Kirn attempts to put his audience in his shoes; trying to make them spot the signs that Kirn could not spot himself while unaware of Rockefeller's past. While this seems clever however, I believe that Kirn does not do as good of a job as he could have at putting his audience in that position. Portraying to an audience interested in true mystery, the audience expects a story full of detail. The one thing I do not enjoy about this book is how despite how close Kirn was with the imposter, he does not provide enough detail to put the reader in the position he was in. Being that he had physical contact with Clark Rockefeller himself for a 15 year period, you would expect Kirn to apply an abundance of detail to his storyline, but in most cases his recalls of the past are merely him explaining what happened as opposed to letting the reader figure it out themselves. Because of this lack of detail I believe that the first half of the book was weak at its ability to appeal directly to its audience.
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