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In this eerily up-to-date collection, Highsmith’s incisive prose chronicles a world gone slightly mad, its catastrophes precipitated by human folly and excess. From the White House under siege by the homeless to a 190-year-old woman perpetually near death and dimly glowing, each tale unfolds the illogical extremes of humanity in the late twentieth century. Highsmith transmogrifies the face of daily existence to lay bare its manifold dark motives. These stories leave us haunted with “afterimages that will tremble—but stay—in our minds” (The New Yorker).
Paperback
First published January 1, 1987
Her errand here is one of black amusement: to populate a world with fools and evildoers and devise thrillingly inventive methods of setting them aflame.Highsmith made derisive fun of both sides of the US political spectrum in her Rent-a-Womb vs the Mighty Right. The last story - President Buck Jones Rallies and Waves the Flag - pointed at the corruption of politics (without suggesting right nor left) of a US President and administration who constantly lied to the American people while profiting greatly. This story includes the use of nuclear weapons, so we can surely tell how much Highsmith disliked people, just as she said. There were other stories which well illustrated the truth of her statement that she didn't like anyone.
Once, when asked why she didn’t write more likeable characters, Highsmith replied, “Perhaps it is because I don’t like anyone. My last books may be about animals.”