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Chillers

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Sometimes, normality hides terrible things. This is what Patricia Highsmith seems to tell us in this collection of stories where no one is what they appear to be. A handful of men and women are enveloped in an aura of absolute normality, but sometimes, trapped by circumstances, they can behave in very strange ways, sometimes with irreversible consequences. This is the case of the retired Skipperton, who takes a neighborhood conflict too far, or Don, a man obsessed with his neighbor's correspondence, or even Dr. McCullough, who contemplates the idea of murdering an old friend he actually detests. We will also see how far Helen's anguish can go after losing her daughter, or what Ginnie feels when she kills someone for the first time, even if it is in self-defense. All of them were, apparently, ordinary people with whom any of us could identify. In these stories, Patricia Highsmith brings to light the darkest and most unsettling side of the human mind and shows how, many times, the boundary that separates good from evil can become imperceptible.

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Chillers, Patricia Highsmith

Langue
Année de publication
1990
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(souple)
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Titre
Chillers
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Penguin
Publié
1990
Format
souple
Pages
240
ISBN10
0140130667
ISBN13
9780140130669
Séries
Évaluation
4,2 sur 5
Description
Sometimes, normality hides terrible things. This is what Patricia Highsmith seems to tell us in this collection of stories where no one is what they appear to be. A handful of men and women are enveloped in an aura of absolute normality, but sometimes, trapped by circumstances, they can behave in very strange ways, sometimes with irreversible consequences. This is the case of the retired Skipperton, who takes a neighborhood conflict too far, or Don, a man obsessed with his neighbor's correspondence, or even Dr. McCullough, who contemplates the idea of murdering an old friend he actually detests. We will also see how far Helen's anguish can go after losing her daughter, or what Ginnie feels when she kills someone for the first time, even if it is in self-defense. All of them were, apparently, ordinary people with whom any of us could identify. In these stories, Patricia Highsmith brings to light the darkest and most unsettling side of the human mind and shows how, many times, the boundary that separates good from evil can become imperceptible.