The Talented Miss Highsmith

Home > Other > The Talented Miss Highsmith > Page 91
The Talented Miss Highsmith Page 91

by Joan Schenkar


  ideas prolific “as rats’ orgasms”

  interviews with

  a libertarian

  library of, in Swiss Literary Archives

  liquid nourishment of

  love affairs. See

  love affairs, PH’s magnetism of

  making furniture

  many selves of

  name of Highsmith, doubtful legality of

  name of Mary

  name of Patsy Plangman

  perversity of, in the upside-down sense

  photographs of

  pseudonyms adopted by, for writing letters of political opinion

  psychoanalysis of

  ranting of

  reading obsessively

  religious family background

  religiousness of

  settlement of estate

  a smoker

  smuggler of snails

  toughness of

  and trains

  travels

  unconventional ideas of

  wants only “the best”

  wills of. See wills of PH

  writing process

  Highsmith, Patricia, appearance

  absence of neck

  beauty of youth, ravaged by the years

  clothing, elegance of

  complexion as she aged

  large hands

  mistaken for a man, and directed to men’s lavatory

  small breasts

  Highsmith, Patricia, biography (1921) birth, name Mary Patricia Highsmith

  (1921–26) raised in Coates house in Fort Worth, Texas

  (1927–38) living in New York City with parents

  (1933) first published work (letters from summer camp)

  (1933–34) returned to Fort Worth and left with grandmother

  (1934–38) in New York City attending high school

  (1935) first story (lost)

  (1937) first published stories

  (1938–42) attends Barnard College while living in New York City

  (1942) graduates, first writing job for the

  Jewish press

  (1943–44) trip to Mexico

  (1943) first love affairs, with women and some men

  (1943) writes for comic book companies for seven years

  (1948) at Yaddo

  (1949) trip to Europe

  (1950) first published novel, Strangers on a Train

  (1951) travels through Europe

  (1952) publishes The Price of Salt under a pseudonym

  (1953) return to Fort Worth

  (1955) publishes The Talented Mr. Ripley

  (1956) gives up New York apartment and lives in environs of New York City

  (1959) traveling in Europe

  (1960) living in Pennsylvania

  (1962) traveling in Europe, meets “Carolyn Besterman”

  (1963) living in Sussex, England

  (1967) moves to the Île-de-France

  (1968) buys house in Montmachoux, in the Île-de-France

  (1970) buys house at 21 rue de la Boissière, in Moncourt

  (1970) visits mother in Fort Worth

  (1972) death of Stanley Highsmith

  (1973) visits mother in Fort Worth

  (1975) mother burns house, is institutionalized

  (1978) at Berlin Film Festival

  (1978) last love affair

  (1980) French tax raid on Moncourt house

  (1980) buys house in Aurigeno, Switzerland

  (1981) partial move to Aurigeno while residing in Moncourt

  (1983) drove car into train

  (1986) operation for lung tumor

  (1986) sells Moncourt house

  (1987) buys land in Tegna and builds Casa Highsmith designed by Tobias Amman

  (1988) moves to Tegna

  (1990) Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres

  (1992) publicity tour of U.S.

  (1993) diagnosed as anemic and stops drinking briefly

  (1995) changes will, leaving most to Yaddo

  (1995) dies in hospital at Locarno

  (1995) memorial service in Tegna

  chronology of

  Fort Worth years

  self-exile in Europe

  Highsmith, Patricia, literary career

  American publishers

  American publishers, none after 1985

  amorality of works

  awards

  books not selling in the U.S.

  books should not be in prison libraries

  critics’ reviews

  deadpan style

  dedications

  European publishers

  French publishers

  German-language publishers

  influences on

  literary executors

  not pleased to make revisions

  an ordinary day of writing

  pages of writing per day

  papers, in the Swiss Literary Archives, Bern

  plotting of PH novels and stories

  productiveness of

  props for, from whatever was at hand

  prose style, flat in later books

  pseudonyms used

  publishers

  slow beginnings of books

  typewriting of

  unconventionality of

  unused titles

  unusualness of writings

  unwritten stories

  See also cahiers; notebooks; poems by PH

  Highsmith, Patricia, quoted

  on writers

  Highsmith, Stanley

  (1924) marries Mary Coates

  (1933) Mary Coates’s promise to divorce

  (1972) dies, and PH asks for autopsy report

  career

  death of

  marriage problems

  PH’s hatred toward

  Highsmith, Stanley and Mary (as PH’s parents)

  Highsmith Country

  Highsmith family

  Hildesheimer, Wolfgang

  Hill, Ellen Blumenthal

  character based on

  love affair with

  suicide attempts

  Hill, Mr. (husband of Ellen Hill)

  Hill Country Arts Foundation

  Himes, Chester

  Hinduism

  Hitchcock, Alfred

  Hitchcock, Patricia

  Hitler, Adolf

  Mein Kampf

  Hoffman, Patrice

  Hofmannsthal, Raimund von

  Holding, Elizabeth Sanxay

  Holliday, Judy (Judith Tuvim)

  Holocaust

  Hölstein, Switzerland

  Home and Food magazine

  homoerotic fantasy (theme)

  homosexual love story, with a happy ending

  homosexuals, male, novelists

  honesty, PH on

  Hook, Sidney

  Hopper, Dennis

  Hopper, Edward

  Horney, Karen

  Hortense (snail)

  Hotel Earle, New York City

  Houdini, Harry

  Howard, Brian

  Howard, Lewis

  Howard Ingham (character)

  Howarth, Tanja

  Huber, Peter

  Hughes, Dorothy B.

  Hughes, Langston

  Hughes, Richard E.

  Human Anatomy, The (book used by PH’s artist parents)

  Human Torch, The (comic book)

  Hutton, Barbara

  Hyman, Stanley Edgar

  “I Despise Your Life” (PH story)

  Île-de-France

  Immeuble Itesa, Tangier

  Impossible Interviews (radio show)

  incest (theme)

  “Incomplete Old Stories” folder of PH

  Indianapolis, Ind.

  Infatuation of the Blue Sailors (film)

  Ingendaay, Paul

  Inhuman Ones, The (unused title)

  “Innocent Witness” (TV script)

  International Herald Tribune

  International Refugee Organisation (IRO)

  Intern
ational Women’s Movement

  interviews with PH

  forged diary entries about

  fraudulent

  lies told

  PH complaints about

  “In the Plaza” (PH story)

  Intifada

  invitations from PH, best honored in the breach

  Isaacs, Leo

  Isaacson, Bobby

  Ischia

  Isherwood, Christopher, Christopher and His

  Kind

  Israel

  PH’s letters criticizing

  Israeli-Arab Six-Day War

  Istanbul

  Italians (in America)

  Italy, PH first trip to

  Jack and Natalia Sutherland (characters)

  Jackson, Derek

  Jackson, Michael

  Thriller

  Jackson, Shirley

  Jacqui (Parisian lover)

  character based on

  Jaffe, Marc

  Jaffee, Al

  Jakob’s Bierstube-Restaurant, Zurich

  Jalapa

  James, Henry

  The Ambassadors, xiii

  The Golden Bowl

  James, Jesse

  James, M. R.

  James, William

  James I of Scotland (PH’s ancestor)

  Jamison, Kay Redfield

  Jane Street, Greenwich Village, New York City

  Janssens, Abe

  “Japanese Wife Joke, The,”

  Jap Buster Johnson (comic book)

  Jeanne T. (lover)

  Jean P. (lover)

  Jebb, Julian

  Jesus Christ

  many references to, in PH’s diaries and notebooks

  Jewish Family Year Book, The

  Jewish press

  PH writing for

  Jews

  in America

  in the comic book industry

  Eastern European

  PH blamed for her tax problem

  PH railing against

  PH’s dentists

  PH’s hatred of, and many good friends among

  PH’s relations with

  refugees from Europe

  women lovers of PH

  young men dated by PH

  Jo (Barnard classmate)

  Joan S. (lover)

  Johnson, Buffie

  Johnson, Margot

  jokes, PH’s

  dirty, telling of

  throwing a dead rat in visitors’ window

  Jones, Miss (from Chicago)

  Joselin, Jean-François

  journalists, PH’s view of

  Joyce, James

  Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

  Joyce, Stanislaus

  Jüdell, Hans Felix

  Judson Boot Company

  Julia Richman High School, New York City

  Jumble Shop, New York City

  Jung, Carl

  Kafka, Franz

  Kahn, Joan

  Kandel (Hyman), Helen

  Kane, Bob

  Kane, Gil

  Kanin, Garson, Born Yesterday

  Katmandou bar, Paris

  Katzenjammer Kids (comic strip)

  Kauffman, Stanley

  Kaufman, George S.

  Kay G.

  Kazin, Alfred

  On Native Ground

  Kazin, Pearl

  Keats, John

  Keel, Anna

  Keel, Daniel

  PH’s literary executor

  Kent, Arthur Atwater

  Kent, Jonathan

  Keogh, Theodora Roosevelt

  Meg

  Keogh, Tom

  Kerouac, Jack

  Ker-Seymer, Barbara

  Keyes, Evelyn

  Kid, The (film)

  Kierkegaard, Søren

  Kiesler, Frederick

  King, Rodney

  Kingsley, Kate (later Skattebol)

  correspondence destroyed by PH, and cut out of PH’s will

  daughter of (PH’s goddaughter, Winifer Skattebol)

  potential literary executrix of PH

  Kinsey Report

  Kinstler, Everett Raymond (Ray)

  Kipness, Rachel

  Kirby, Jack

  “Kite, The” (PH story)

  Klaff, Jack

  Klein, Dr. Eva

  Kling, Mary

  Knet, Monsieur

  Knopf

  Knox, John

  Koestler, Arthur

  suicide of

  Koestler, Cynthia

  Kohly, Philippe

  Kokoschka, Oskar

  Krafft-Ebing, Richard von

  Kramer, Larry

  Krazy Kat (comic strip)

  Krim, Seymour

  Kurds

  Kurtz, Midge

  La Casa Chiquita, Taxco

  Lacombrade, Francis

  Laffont publisher

  Laforêt, Marie

  La Guardia, Fiorello

  Lake Como

  Lamarr, Hedy

  Lambert, Gavin

  Lambertville, Pa.

  Landshoff-Yorck, Ruth

  Larry Webster (character)

  Lassally, Alice Gershon. See Gershon, Alice

  “Last Unmaidenly Voyage of the S.S.” (unfinished story)

  Latham, Minor

  Latimer, Charles

  La Touche, John

  Lawrence, D. H.

  Lawrence, T. E.

  Lazarus, Leon

  Le Clercq, Tanaquil

  Le Cri du hibou (film)

  Ledbetter, Huddie (“Leadbelly”)

  Lee, Harper

  Lee, Robert E.

  Lee, Stan

  Le Gallienne, Eva

  “Legend of the Convent of St. Fotheringay, The” (PH story)

  Léger, Fernand

  Legman, Gershon

  Leise, leise im Wind (PH short-story collection)

  Le Jeu de Dames bar, Paris

  Le Meurtrier (film)

  Le Monacle bar

  Le Monde

  Lemstrom-Sheedy, Bob

  Lemstrom-Sheedy, Kaarin

  Lenin

  Le Nouvel Observateur

  Lenox, Mass.

  Leone, Sergio

  Leopold, Nathan, and Robert Loeb

  Lerman, Leo

  lesbian bars, PH in

  lesbian circles

  Lesbian Herstory Archives

  lesbian publishing companies

  lesbian pulp fiction

  Letitia (character)

  letters of PH, maps, lists, and calculations in

  Leverson, Ada

  Levin, Meyer

  Lévi-Strauss, Claude

  Levy, Julien

  Lévy, Raoul

  Lewis, Edith

  Lewis, Edna

  Lewis, Michael

  Lewis, Peggy

  eldest daughter of

  L’Express magazine

  L’Histoire de M. Vieux Bois (early cartoon book)

  Lieutenant Diana Prince (comic book character)

  life, a trap

  Liggenstorfer-Fritsch, Marianne

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Linda (girl acquaintance)

  Linea d’ombra magazine

  Lippincott

  listmaking of PH

  loathed characters

  “Little Crimes for Little Tots” (PH list)

  Little Engine That Could, The

  Little Tales of Misogyny (PH short-story collection)

  award to

  theater piece made from

  Locarno

  Grand Hotel

  hospital in

  Locarno Film Festival

  Loggenberg, Bee

  Loing Canal

  London

  PH business in

  PH first time in

  PH visits

  Royal Free Hospital

  shabbiness of

  stays in

  “Swinging,”

  London, Jack

  London Life

  London Magazine

  Long Island, N.Y.


  Longworth, Alice Roosevelt

  Loriot, Noëlle

  Los Angeles, Calif.

  PH visits to

  Losey, Joseph

  Losey, Patricia

  Louis, Joe

  love, PH inspired by

  love affairs, PH’s

  PH’s assessment of

  repetition in

  Lovecraft, H. P.

  “Love Is a Terrible Thing” (PH story)

  Lowell, Robert

  Luce, Henry

  Luce Publications

  Lumpkin, Robert

  Luzi, Alexander and Marguerite

  Lyne, Mme Elizabeth

  MacDowell Colony

  Maclaren-Ross, Julian

  MacNeice, Hedli

  MacNeice, Louis

 

‹ Prev