This section contains 2,331 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |
Kelly is an instructor of creative writing and English literature. In the following essay, he looks at Highsmith’s limitations as a writer and finds that she uses her shortcomings to her advantage.
Throughout her long writing career, Patricia Highsmith garnered a legion of fans, a base that continued to grow after her death in 1995. Those who appreciate her work, however, frequently find themselves embittered about how limited her literary reputation is; many feel that Highsmith has been unfairly dismissed as a minor talent, dismissed as a mere genre writer. Some explain this slight with the belief that she was a victim of the prejudices of an unenlightened society, an audience that could not deal with the fact that Highsmith, a woman, wrote so often about the seamier aspects of modern life. Her supporters point to other writers who crossed over from the small category of...
This section contains 2,331 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |