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July 11, 2007

HELL OF A WOMAN

When Dave Thompson, a bookseller at one of my favorite independents in the country, Murder by the Book in Houston, asked me to contribute to a forthcoming anthology, I jumped at the chance. HELL OF A WOMAN: An Anthology of Female Noir will be published by Busted Flush Press in December of 2007.

Edited by the very talented Megan Abbott, (Edgar, Barry and Agatha award-nominated author of THE SONG IS YOU, DIE A LITTLE and the upcoming QUEENPIN), this anthology about the women of noir fiction features promises to be a gem. I was thrilled to write about my favorite noir author Patricia Highsmith. Here’s what I wrote:

The Talented Ms. Highsmith
By Lisa Unger

In some ways, I suppose I’ve always felt a bit alienated by noir fiction, although I have always adored that smoky, mysterious atmosphere—the hourglass-shaped dame half in the shadows, the cigarette dangling from pouting lips, the impossibly virile man with a gun and a low ball of whiskey.

My early exposure to the genre was mainly film, classics such as The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), The Maltese Falcon (1941), and Strangers on a Train (1951). As for noir fiction, however, I often found the characterizations shallow, the prose too spare, the portrayal of women two-dimensional and flagrantly misogynistic. As a young female writer, being neither good girl, nor vixen, nor deranged man-eater, I wondered if the noir greats had much to offer me. Rather than being forged as a writer from this kind of fiction, I came to the party late.

My discovery of Patricia Highsmith (1921‑1995) changed the way I thought about noir. With her dense characterizations and her subtle, deliberate ratcheting of suspense sentence by sentence, Highsmith captivated me. Her characters—Thomas Ripley, David Kelsey, to name two—are truly haunting, utterly sick and twisted, and yet strangely sympathetic. They’re mentally ill, they’re killers; you really like them anyway.

Highsmith’s carefully evoked images and the desperately unhappy people who populate her novels linger long after the book is closed: In This Sweet Sickness (1960), David Kelsey is so in love with a woman who rejected him that he creates a home where he retreats and pretends they live there as a married couple. Meanwhile, he stalks her. Very, very creepy. In Deep Water (1957), Vic is so desperate to hold on to his loveless marriage to Melinda that he allows her to have affairs, all the while sick with jealousy. Driven to the edge of his sanity by their arrangement, he tries to win her love by inventing a tall tale of a murder he’s committed –one that soon comes true. Unbearable suspense.

Like most noir, Highsmith’s prose is lean but it packs a one-two punch; it’s both beautiful and deep. Highsmith had a strong interest in abnormal psychology and spent a great deal of time reading case studies, making her psychological portraits as realistic as they are disturbing. In her novels, we are on the inside looking out.

Highsmith peeled back the layers of the mundane and the familiar to explore a dark heart of obsessive behavior, dangerous appetites, and mental instability. She was a keen and non-judgmental observer of all the folly and cruelty of the human existence. Largely unrecognized prior to her death in 1995, Patricia Highsmith was a true master of noir fiction. Her work caused me to rediscover and fully appreciate the entire genre with fresh eyes, to finally see it in all its richness and originality. I strongly suggest This Sweet Sickness, Deep Water and The Talented Mr. Ripley (1955) just to start.

For more information on HELL OF A WOMAN: An Anthology of Female Noir (Busted Flush Press/ December 2007) visit: www.bustedflushpress.com


Ridley Crosses the Pond

Ridley is a globetrotter, we know this. One might find her in France, Germany, The Netherlands, to name just a few of the places publishing her adventures. Thanks to the stellar foreign rights people at Crown, BEAUTIFUL LIES and SLIVER OF TRUTH have been sold in 26 territories and counting. So I am thrilled and privileged to hear from readers around the world who are connecting with Ridley; one morning I had email from readers in three different countries. Amazing!

The most recent of these sales was to Arrow, an imprint of Random House UK. They will be publishing BEAUTIFUL LIES, SLIVER OF TRUTH and the next two books (more details to come). It’s a wonderful arrangement and I’m very excited (even more so because they’ll be coordinating with my pals at Random House Australia who have done a FANTASTIC job with BL and SLIVER).

From the Arrow press release:

BEAUTIFUL LIES will be published in hardback in spring 2008, with both the paperback of BEAUTIFUL LIES and the hardback of the second Ridley Jones novel, SLIVER OF TRUTH, following six months later.

In addition to her New York Times bestseller success, Lisa Unger is also already a major seller for Random House Australia.

Kate Elton, Arrow Publishing Director said: ‘I’m hugely excited to be adding Lisa Unger to Arrow’s list of bestselling crime and thriller authors. She’s a fantastically good writer, and Ridley Jones is a brilliant series character with huge potential.’

For more information about the Random House UK deal, please click here! And to see some of the gorgeous cover incarnations from my publishers around the world vist me at www.myspace.com/authorlisaunger !