Zurich publisher to release hidden diaries of Patricia Highsmith
The notes and diaries of the late American writer Patricia Highsmith will be published for the first time in autumn 2021. They document Highsmith’s life from her years as a student in New York to her death in Switzerland in 1995, as Zurich publisher Diogenes announced on Tuesday.
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Highsmith’s 56 notebooks – comprising a total of 8,000 pages – were found hidden behind bed linen and towels in her house in the southern Swiss canton of Ticino by her editor Anna von Planta and then-publisher Daniel Keel. Illustrated with the writer’s drawings and watercolours, they will be published on what would have been Highsmith’s 100th birthday.
Among her most famous works are the Tom Ripley books and the lesbian love story Carol. Her novels and thrillers have been filmed by directors including Alfred Hitchcock and Wim Wenders. According to Diogenes, the film Deep Water – based on the 1957 novel – is currently being shot with Ben Affleck. In addition, a series on the Ripley books is being produced for the TV station Showtime, with shooting set to start in 2020.
As Highsmith, living a nomadic life in Europe, wrote in the 1950s, “Whenever I get desperately homesick, but still not desperately enough to spend several hundred dollars getting back to America, I go to Switzerland. … Ah that luscious Grade A milk! … And a hotel room with a free cake of soap on the basin!”
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Her heroes were often misfits and her best-selling books sold millions. But American writer Patricia Highsmith preferred the quiet life, living out her last days in Switzerland. Highsmith wrote 22 novels, several of which were turned into films by such greats as Alfred Hitchcock or Wim Wenders, as well as many short stories. The prolific…
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