Concept the world without conscience, guilt, or regret - no matter what action - there is no sympathy or concern for the happiness of friends, relatives, and even families. This is an antisocial world. This is Patricia Sea Smith's genius, Mr. Ripley's Tomripley world. Tom grew into a smart youth, and eventually caused a crime frenzy in Europe. Carnival may be sporadic, but his dynamism behind this carnival is free.
Thomas "Tom" Ripley is a fictitious character 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.
Sea Smith has never explicitly explained Ripley as gay or bisexual, but in some parts of Ripley's novel he has an appeal to men he can not recognize. In talented Mr. Ripley he was obsessed with Dickie Greenleaf and married a green leaf's girlfriend, Marge Sherwood, so he fancied a green leaf to reject her and beat. He also worried that others thought that he was gay and wanted to give up men and women and joked.
She believes that Ripley is a serial killer with a liar "Sweet and kind and completely immoral" liar. In his commentary "Purple noon", René Clemente's 1960 film was adapted from Mr. Genius Ripley, and Roger Albert explains Ripley as "attractive, cultural and monster" did. "Book" magazine cites Ripley as 60th in the list of "Top 100 Best Novels in Novels" since 1900. Ripley is elegant, refined and elegant, living a relaxing life in the French countryside. He spends most of his time in gardening, creating paintings, or learning languages. This is due to the stolen heritage, a small income from the back master gallery, and the subsidy that his wife received from her wealthy father. He does not like those who are polite, friendly, cultural and lacking this quality; when Pritchard appeared at Ripley Under Water, their bad taste and attitude soon made him angry.