The purpose of this work is to analyze the role of Patricia Highsmith as Tom Ripley as a moral entity and as a complex place for readers to see the role of Ripley. This work also determines whether there is a moral or ideological underpinning of the blacksmith's work, and whether it is socially reinforcing or purely destructive. Patricia Highsmith is a very successful female writer in the USA who died of her career from 1945 to 1995 (Wilson, 2010).
Thomas "Tom" Ripley is a fictitious person in a series of criminal novels by American novelist Patricia Hyssmith, and is the adaptation of several movies. He is known as a replay in five novels - a replay game published between 1955 and 1991, followed by a replay boy, and a replay underwater. Sea Smith introduced Tom Ripley as a young liar in talented Mr. Ripley (1955). His parents drowned as an orphan at the age of five, and my aunt's Dottie grew up in Bourne and laughed as "girls". In his teenage years he tried to escape from his aunt to New York but eventually he moved to New York at the age of 20.
For this work, I decided to diagnose the role of Tom Ripley from Patricia Haysmith's 1951 novel "Mr. Ripley". The novel received the Edgar Allan Poe Mystery writer award and introduced an attractive anti-hero Tomripley displayed in many of her subsequent criminal novels. In 1999, this book became a movie starring Jude Law, Matt Damon, Kate Blanchett, and Gwyneth Paltrow. This novel was written from the viewpoint of a third party. Creation of this novel began in Manhattan, New York. So the reader brought this character to Italy where his unusual mental condition was obvious.
Patricia Highsmith - I read the names of the five novels by Ripriad - Tom Ripley - finished writing the last book last year (earlier this year) experienced the joy and promise of the story that I have never experienced since then did. When I was in my teens I read John Grisham and Michael Crichton in my parents' backyard. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 's book Americanah impressed me with recent memories. It says that I am innovative because it provides young, ambitious, highly intelligent, sometimes insight into the reality of single black women 's meaning. This is an honest book about the constant desire and nostalgia of this metaphor for what is called race, identity, and family. I was also impressed with this story. Because it touched the relationship of love between the two central figures.