COUNTDOWN: Mid-20th Century North American Crime
BOOK/Short 44 (of 250) SPECIAL AWARD: FAVORITE HALLOWEEN READ
I read this collection 4 years ago and it's stayed with me since, especially "The Network" which I think the best in the collection (although the title story is probably one of the great "read-out-loud-at-Halloween" stories and I'd say it's pure horror) and a work that HAS to be included within Mid-20th Century American Crime works. It's amazingly prescient, and yes, it concerns a social network, old-school style. Lady Gaga recently said something like "Social Media is the worst invention ever." Highsmith agrees, but as early as 1970!
HOOK - 4 stars:>>>>>The telephone-two Princess telephones (it's 1970, right?), one yellow, one mauve-rang in Fran's small apartment every half hour or so. It rang so often, because Fran now and indeed since about a year was unofficial Mother Superior of the Network.<<<<PACE - 4: A short that gets to the point very fast.
PLOT - 3: There is a saying that there are only 2 stories: someone leaves town, or someone comes to town. Here, someone new comes to town. The network heats up fast and furious when someone (standard plot, really) comes to town.
CAST - 4: Fran, our Mother Superior, is, well, like all Mother Superiors you may know about. (Except the lovely, brilliant, kind one in "The Sound of Music.") She's more like Meryl Streep's Mother Superior in "Doubt." Then there are 2 phones playing a huge part. Then the new person. Then the rest of the network. But this story is all about that network, that's the main character.
ATMOSPHERE - 5: Weirdly prescient of Highsmith to predict the consequences of social media, the crime of trapping ourselves and others by giving everything away. Yes, go ahead, right now, try to escape...no matter what, everything you've ever written is out there FOREVER (just in case you try to run for a political office, for example).
SUMMARY: 4.0. Highsmith is one of those authors who can easily tell the difference between short story material, novella material, and what makes a good to great novel. Here, though, she not only nails a very good short story, she shows a prescience that it's just plain downright frightening. She KNEW where we where headed!
ORIGINAL REVIEW:
For those who consider themselves the independent type, maybe the kind of person on the runrunrun (I've moved all over the USA) when the net starts to close, "The Network" is as close to a truly terrifying story we'll ever get, or want to. Among this dozen shorts, there's a story or two bound to make almost anyone uncomfortable at leaving their cozyhomecorner world of reading. But alas, I must have more Highsmith! So I'm off to the library anyway. All alone. And hopefully back before dark.