Patricia Highsmith

The Blunderer

"Highsmith's novels are peerlessly disturbing...bad dreams that keep us thrashing for the rest of the night."—The New Yorker

With the savage humor of Evelyn Waugh and the macabre sensibility of Edgar Allan Poe, Patricia Highsmith brought a distinct twentieth-century acuteness to her prolific body of fiction. In her more than twenty novels, psychopaths lie in wait amid the milieu of the mundane, in the neighbor clipping the hedges or the spouse asleep next to you at night.

Now, Norton continues the revival of this noir genius with another of her lost masterpieces: The Blunderer, first published in 1953 and hailed as her finest novel, about the rise and fall of a faithful suburban husband who plots his wife's demise in fantasies gruesome and eerily serene.



Born in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1921, Patricia Highsmith spent much of her adult life in Switzerland and France. Educated at Barnard where she studied English, Latin, and Greek, she had her first novel, Strangers on a Train, published in 1950 to great commercial success and filmed by Alfred Hitchcock. Despite receiving little recognition in her home country, Highsmith, the author of more than twenty books, has won the O. Henry Memorial Award, The Edgar Allan Poe Award, Le Grand Prix de Littérature Policière, and the Award of the Crime Writers Association of Great Britain. She died in Switzerland in 1995 and her literary archives are maintained in Berne.
Blunderer book jacket


Visit the Highsmith Website



Also Available:
The Selected Stories of Patricia Highsmith

Sel Stories Highsmith book jkt


People Who Knock on the Door

 People Who Knock book jkt



November 2001 / paperback / ISBN 0-393-32244-0 / 6" x 8" / 288 pages / Fiction
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