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Patricia Highsmith : Plotting and Writing Suspense Fiction
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Author: Patricia Highsmith
Title: Plotting and Writing Suspense Fiction
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 160
Date: 2001-09-08
ISBN: 031228666X
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Weight: 0.35 pounds
Size: 0.39 x 5.54 x 8.47 inches
Edition: 1st
Amazon prices:
$2.88used
$9.61new
$15.97Amazon
Previous givers: 3 Deseree (USA: MN), Patna (Italia), Steven West (USA: TX)
Previous moochers: 3 Caer (USA: MD), Luca Persiani (Italia), karichards (USA: IN)
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Description: Product Description
Patricia Highsmith, author of Strangers On a Train, The Talented Mr.Ripley, Found In The Street, and many other books, is known as one of the finest suspense novelists. In this book, she analyzes the key elements of suspense fiction, drawing upon her own experience in four decades as a working writer. She talks about, among other topics; how to develop a complete story from an idea; what makes a plot gripping; the use (and abuse) of coincidence; characterization and the "likeable criminal"; going from first draft to final draft; and writing the suspense short story.
Throughout the book, Highsmith illustrates her points with plentiful examples from her own work, and by discussing her own inspirations, false starts, dead ends, successes, and failures, she presents a lively and highly readable picture of the novelist at work.

Anyone who wishes to write crime and suspense fiction, or who enjoys reading it, will find this book an insightful guide to the craft and art of a modern master.


Amazon.com Review
Suspense, like other genre fiction, is often assumed to be inferior in quality to more "serious" fiction. A suspense story can be every bit as well-wrought as any other, argues Patricia Highsmith in Plotting and Writing Suspense Fiction. To show how, Highsmith focuses as much on her failures as on her successes. Amid discussions about growing ideas, story development, plotting, first and second drafts, and revisions are anecdotes from Highsmith's own career. Highsmith (Strangers on a Train) admits to editing with crayon (doing so "gives one the proper cavalier attitude"), napping on the job (it helps solve problems), and having written one "really dull" book. Though this book is slim, there are some lovely thoughts on such issues as creating a murderer-hero with "pleasant qualities," "stretch[ing] the reader's credulity," and using "as much care in depicting the face and appearance of ... main characters" as a painter would with a portrait. --Jane Steinberg

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