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The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith
 
 
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The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Joan Schenkar

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Produktbeschreibungen

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"Schenkar has a wonderfully bold approach: not worrying about a linear chronology (although this is meticulously supplied in the appendices), but choosing instead to follow the emotional water course of Highsmith’s life, allowing her subject to find her own level — to be tidal, sullen, to flow without check, so that events in one decade naturally make an imaginative tributary into turbulence before and after. Schenkar’s writing is witty, sharp and light-handed, a considerable achievement given the immense detail of this biography. Highsmith was a detail junkie. Schenkar’s nonlinear organizing method was a brilliant idea to save herself — and the reader — from data overload. This is a biography of clarity and style. A model of its kind." --Jeanette Winterson, The New York Times Book Review; cover review

"This is no ordinary biography...[Ms. Schenkar] writes with great authority and perverse affection...'The Talented Miss Highsmith' breaks much ground in connecting Highsmith’s diabolical tales with the real women who prompted her strongest passions ....In addition to its impressive sweep, this biography also values minutiae. An exacting inventory of the contents of Highsmith’s office captures every mundane object, right down to the goat’s bell and the Wite-Out pencil. Highsmith loved details like that. And Ms. Schenkar shows an uncannily keen grasp of Highsmith’s spirit." —Janet Maslin, The New York Times

"Throughout nearly 700 pages of lustrous text, Schenkar's prose is as supple and shapely as Highsmith's was flat and functional. "The Talented Miss Highsmith" is both dazzling and definitive ... Its scope and scholarship are unassailable, and its vigor indefatigable. t's a volume as original as its contemptible, miserable, irresistible subject." —Daniel Mallory, Los Angeles Times

"Ms. Schenkar provides a vivid, disturbing portrait of a writer whose work—thanks to some virtuosic movie-making—is known more as source material than as literary art in its own right... It is hard to imagine a more thoroughly fact-filled or energetic biography than "The Talented Miss Highsmith" or one more determined to examine the deepest recesses of its complicated subject." —Alexander Theroux, The Wall Street Journal

"[A] biography that captures the writer in all her sullen, sinister, ambivalent glory. Grade: A" Entertainment Weekly

"What most impresses me with Schenkar's approach is its boldness: she casts aside chronology to get at the themes of her heroine's character, and she conjures those themes by unabashedly connecting the events of Highsmith's life to her work. So we get marvellous formulations like this: 'Pat thought about love the way she thought about murder: as an emotional urgency between two people, one of whom dies in the act.' Much of Highsmith's work remains little known by the general reading public, and the details of her fascinating life obscure, Schenkar's book should serve as a corrective. We plan on delving into some Highsmith books we haven't read (I've just begun "The Price of Salt" and Jon is tackling Ripley), and we hope you'll approach this month's pick in a similar way—as an invitation to learning more about the work of, as Schenkar puts it, 'Her High Darkness, Patricia Highsmith: author of some of the twentieth century's most dangerous fictions.'" —Macy Halford, The New Yorker Online Book Club: Book of the Month

"Schenkar’s fascinating biography portrays Highsmith as driven by obsessions, especially her love-hate relationship with her mother, and a yin-yang ambivalence that became a central main theme in her writings ... The catalyst for Schenkar’s exhaustive, compelling work, which boasts copious end notes, maps, charts, diagrams, bibliography, and chronology, was the recent unearthing of 8,000 pages of Highsmith’s secret journals. The result is an essential, scholarly, lesbian, and literary biography." —Booklist 

"A comprehensive, nuanced evaluation of Highsmith Country." —Kirkus Reviews

"VERDICT: An imaginative, definitive Highsmith biography, great for literature students, Highsmith fans, and mystery readers." Library Journal

"Joan Schenkar is the first writer to grapple with Patricia Highsmith on every level of her being, from her bizarre personal life to her incredibly prolific writing life. It’s hard to avoid superlatives when describing Schenkar’s biography, but there doesn’t seem to be any other way to go about it." —Deirdre Bair, winner of the National Book Award for Samuel Beckett: a Biography

“This is an epic biography - vivid with Joan Schenkar's concern for her subject - the mercurial, gifted, fascinating mystery novelist Patricia Highsmith. Schenkar is an inexhaustible researcher and meticulous cultural historian, especially in the hidden pan-sexual world of literary New York of the 40s and 50s. She has a remarkable ability to evoke landscapes, relationships and, above all, a myriad of personal details from the fountain pen Highsmith used to the amount of alcohol she drank to the women she loved (and lost) all the while telling us how Highsmith concocted masterpieces like Strangers on a Train and The Talented Mr. Ripley. This is a big book, an awesome achievement.” —Patricia Bosworth, author of Diane Arbus: a Biography

“Patricia Highsmith is a fascinating and bizarre figure, and a tremendous challenge for the biographer who has to account for her alcoholism, lesbianism, negativism, criminal tendencies, huge talent and much else. Joan Schenkar has accomplished this amazing feat with a really smart book.” —Diane Johnson, critic and novelist, author of Lulu in Marrakech

"I was enthralled by The Talented Miss Highsmith. It's a brilliant biography, so finely judged in its critical appreciation of  Pat's work, wonderfully informative about its sources and inspiration, and both enlightening and harrowing in its revelation of her tormented personality and darkly troubled yet (because of her exceptional talent) in some ways triumphant life." —Francis Wyndham,  critic, editor, winner of the Whitbread First Novel Award forThe Other Garden

Kurzbeschreibung

A 2010 Lambda Literary Award Winner
A 2009 Edgar Award Nominee
A 2009 Agatha Award Nominee
A Publishers Weekly Pick of the Week

Patricia Highsmith, one of the great writers of twentieth-century American fiction, had a life as darkly compelling as that of her favorite “hero-criminal,” the talented Tom Ripley. Joan Schenkar maps out this richly bizarre life from her birth in Texas to Hitchcock’s filming of her first novel, Strangers on a Train, to her long, strange self-exile in Europe. We see her as a secret writer for the comics, a brilliant creator of disturbing fictions, and an erotic predator with dozens of women (and a few good men) on her love list. The Talented Miss Highsmith is the first literary biography with access to Highsmith’s whole story: her closest friends, her oeuvre, her archives. It’s a compulsive page-turner unlike any other, a book worthy of Highsmith herself.

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A paradox she'd like: The world's nastiest woman gets a brilliant biography 8. Dezember 2009
Von Jesse Kornbluth - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
She kept 300 snails as pets. She drank a quart of gin a day. She considered robbery worse than murder. She left the United States to live in Europe because of what she called "the Negro problem" --- by which she did not mean discrimination against Negroes, but the civil rights movement that had Negroes demanding their rights.

A houseguest once left her window open; she threw a dead rat inside. She took tips left on restaurant tables. She'd drive 60 miles to get a cheaper spaghetti dinner. She called Hitler's extermination policy a "semicaust", because only half the world's Jews died.

She thought that "life didn't make sense without a crime in it." Her idea of happiness was to write a murder. At 1:30 in the morning, standing in a lover's apartment, she didn't hesitate to call another woman. "I am a man and I love women," she wrote. She liked young blonds, very made up.

A mental health professional, observing her for only a few minutes, pegged her as a psychopath. Another writer described her as "a black cloud." Her own assessment: "If I were to relax and become human, I could not bear my life."

No wonder, then, that Joan Schenkar begins The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith like this: "She wasn't nice. She was rarely polite. And no one who knew her well would have called her a generous woman."

Why would you even think of reading more than 600 pages about such a monster?

Well, because Highsmith wrote a half dozen books --- among them Strangers on a Train, The Talented Mr. Ripley and a wonderfully sexy, though never graphic, lesbian novel called The Price of Salt --- that will be read as long as readers like fiction that equally thrills and chills.

Or you could just be a lover of biographies and sense that, in Highsmith, you will encounter a train wreck of a person like no one you've ever encountered --- and, as if you were a pedestrian looking up at a would-be jumper on a terrace, you won't be able to tear your eyes away.

Or, simply, you want to read a book that is original in form, authoritative in its evidence, and dazzling in its writing. And because I am now leaving description for praise, I should disclose: Joan Schenkar has been a close friend for 35 years. Her value to me is not that she is steady and loyal and easy to be with; it is exactly the opposite. Ms. Schenkar is steely and demanding; she sets the bar high and brooks no fools. I caffeinate before I see her, spellcheck before I hit SEND. In return I get tough-love criticism, dark humor, ideas I find nowhere else. She strikes me as the ideal biographer for Highsmith: brave, original and scary smart --- like Highsmith, but without the defects.

But I'm almost falling into a trap. Unless we are very young or lifelong fools, we do not look to artists --- or their biographers --- for our role models. Their work is enough. And Highsmith's work is a triumph of will and talent over circumstance and pathology --- or perhaps an astute mixture of all of that.

I'm going to skip over Highsmith's twisted relationship with her mother, her antipathy for her father and her early efforts to get somewhere as a writer to the core of her art and personality --- her obsession with love as an urgent, alpha emotion destined to end badly. Like murder.

Consider her first novel, "Strangers on a Train", which quickly became one of Alfred Hitchcock's better movies. You know the set-up: If each man commits a murder for the other, there will be no incriminating clues --- the anonymity will yield two perfect crimes. Thisis, says Schenkar, "the quintessential Highsmith situation: two men bound together psychologically by the stalker-like fixation of one upon the other, a fixation that always involved a disturbing, implicitly homoerotic fantasy."

In Highsmith, there's no real artistic development; this "double" plot is one she uses again and again. And it works just about every time, because who else writes --- approvingly --- of "the unequivocal triumph of evil over good"? Her villains aren't exactly villains to her. They're escape artists. That is, everything she wasn't.

Oh, but she tried. Through obsessive relationships --- she once seemed to have five lovers on the hook. Through alcohol. Through a push-pull relationship with her mother. And, most of all, through her writing, her one reliable way of feeling like herself.

Highsmith filled 38 notebooks and 18 diaries, 8,000 unpublished pages. With few exceptions --- she pretended she didn't spend seven years writing stories for comic books --- these are pivotal. As Schenkar notes, "She ratted herself out every chance she got." Schenkar should know. She read every notebook and diary and unearthed a staggering number of Highsmith's lovers. (You're thinking: It takes an obsessive to write a biography of an obsessive. Almost. I'd say: It takes a biographer who has equal parts empathy, imagination and artistry.)

It would be perverse, after all that research, to reduce Highsmith to a conventional biography. So Schenkar abandons chronology. Instead, she backtracks, skips ahead, loops around to trace themes and obsessions in Highsmith's life and work. The result is very much like an amusement park ride, with high-speed turns and dizzying descents. And that would not be perverse but correct: A writer like no other gets a biography like no other.
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The Talented Miss Highsmith - a tale of American culture 31. Januar 2010
Von Barbara Spaeth - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
You buy The Talented Miss Highsmith to learn more about the life and mind behind some of the mid-20th Century's most original mystery/crime fiction, and are rewarded by author Joan Schenkar's much broader revelation of the cultures that nurtured its subject, Patricia Highsmith.
Let's see: urban Texas and a family steeped in Jim Crow southern bigotry, resentment and commercial art; New York of the 1940s and `50s, where millions, like Highsmith, re-invented themselves and stewed up a new kind of sophistication; and post-World War II America's self-image, captured in comic books and pulp fiction - all muscles, good looks and seduction, one step ahead of financial ruin, larcenous or even murderous activity.
Particularly intriguing is Schenkar's dissection of Highsmith's escapes to Britain and Europe - where she and other Americans of her generation sought insulation from their native cultures to assume the trappings of intriguing exotics.
In addition to the fascinating back-stories of Highsmith's crime writing, Schenkar gives us a true picture of American lifestyles in the Truman-Eisenhower era. You'll also learn about those who aided and abetted the ultimately financially successful, but thoroughly unpleasant Miss Highsmith as she startled us with her tales created out of such bizarre, but tolerated, thought and behavior.
I cannot recall when I have had so much adventure following the trail of a biographical subject who had presented herself in one way, only to be revealed by Schenkar in so many others, as she lurked, dodged, sneaked and deceived us throughout her astoundingly long life, eventually to be left out of style by the cultural changes in the country she'd abandoned. Loved the map of Highsmith's New York and the pictures that documented her descent from beauty to visual monstrosity.
41 von 52 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
THE PATRICIA HIGHSMITH BIBLE 10. Dezember 2009
Von M. Grace - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
Complex and detailed and definitive. The previous review covered much of what I feel. Patricia Highsmith had much more recognition in Europe than the USA. Her NY publishers always pitching that no one liked Highsmith, no one identified with her books, there was no one to root for. That's why this country is so dreary. A land of second rate heros and do-gooders. I loved Highsmith's anti-heros. They were much more fun than the conventional boring stars of most American suspense novels. The villain is always more attractive in a Highsmith novel and she was the "queen" of this genre when it came to bad guys getting away with it. The bio is bedside reading for any of her admirers. As for being a nice person - Highsmith was an artist not a hotel manager! Buy the book today.

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