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Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories

Patricia Highsmith

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Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories

By: Patricia Highsmith

Narrarated by: Bronson Pinchot, Cassandra Campbell

Edited with an Introduction by Joan Schenkar

The remarkable renaissance of Patricia Highsmith continues with the publication of Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories, featuring two groundbreaking novels as well as a trove of penetrating short stories. With a critical introduction by Joan Schenkar, situating Highsmith’s classic works within her own tumultuous life, this book provides a useful guide to some of her most dazzlingly seductive writing. Strangers on a Train, transformed into a legendary film by Alfred Hitchcock, displays Highsmith’s genius for psychological characterization and tortuous suspense, while The Price of Salt, with its lesbian lovers and a creepy PI, provides a thrilling and highly controversial depiction of “the love that dare not speak its name.” Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories firmly establishes Highsmith’s centrality to American culture by presenting key works that went on to influence a half century of literature and film. Abandoned by the wider reading public in her lifetime, Highsmith finally gets the canonical recognition that is her due.

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Total File Size: 752 MB (22 files) Total Length: 27 Hours, 18 Minutes

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Sara Jaffe

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Sara Jaffe, a writer of fiction and criticism, has had work recently in Paul Revere’s Horse, Encyclopedia, and Yeti. She’s co-editor of The Art of Touring, a co...more »

01.21.11
Patricia Highsmith, Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories
2011 | Label: Blackstone Audiobooks

Patricia Highsmith reveals the troubled minds behind heinous crimes
Patricia Highsmith is best known in the US as a writer of crime novels primarily attendant to murder, conspiracy and deception, but Highsmith’s real subject matter is what causes people to commit those crimes. Patricia Highsmith: Selected Novels and Short Stories reveals what anyone who has taken a Psychology 101 class knows: criminal acts are the results of troubled minds. Perhaps most terrifying of all, Highsmith’s writings suggest that any human mind can be troubled to the point of breaking.

Of the two novels included here, Strangers on a Train is the more well-known. Those who’ve seen the Hitchcock film about the casual meeting of a wealthy young gadabout and an ambitious tennis player (an architect in the novel) who come up with an outlandish scheme to “trade” murders will find the novel deeper, darker and bereft of vindication. The tension is relentless throughout, as the sociopathic Bruno worms his way into naïve Guy’s unconscious, until the shedding of Guy’s innocence is all but inevitable. Highsmith does sociopaths well — we see one again in the wax-museum-obsessed teenager in the short story “Woodrow Wilson’s Necktie” — but far creepier is the relatively un-pathological circle of friends in “Not One Of Us” who slowly drive an unwanted member of their group to self-destruction out of pure, insecure malice, or the woman who cuts her lover’s favorite sweater to shreds as a “joke” in “Quiet Night.”

Interestingly, it’s The Price of Salt, the second novel included in this collection, and Highsmith’s most explicit take on (her own) lesbian love, that is most free of pathology and abjection. (This novel supposedly inspired Nabokov’s Lolita.) Obsession, yes, and some steely grey skies, and a loaded gun — but the novel is ultimately about love, not crime. Maybe, after all, Highsmith believed that it was the oppressiveness of the world we live in that drives people to murder and despair, but that things could be different in a world where a love story between two women is allowed a happy ending.

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