According to Fahy, Capote's writing does a good job of capturing the loneliness, marginalization, and persecution that those who didn't conform to or couldn't live up to white middle-class norms experienced. This particular assertion emphasizes Capote's emphasis on depicting the hardships of people on the periphery of society. Analyzing Capote's writing style, topics, and societal commentary across his body of work provides strong evidence for these assertions. The key takeaway from this chapter, in my opinion, is how Fahy analyzes Capote's writing in light of its historical setting and shows how politics influenced it. This analysis presents Capote as intensely involved with the social fears of the 1940s and 1950s, refuting the idea that he was detached from political