New York Magazine - USA (2020-10-12)

(Antfer) #1
october12–25, 2020 | newyork 87

h on the Ineffable Pleasures of Patricia Highsmith’s The Price of Salt

Throughoutthenovel,
Thereseis lookingfor
instructionfromCarolas
thoughshe’s fillingsome
sortofparentalvoid.Sothis
is anincrediblyprofound
moment,onethat’s so
recognizabletomeasa
queerwoman—thatTherese
hasa certainty, andshe
doesn’t needit definedor
explainedorsanctioned
byanyoutsideforce.
I spenta goodpart of
mylateteensandearly20s
readingallthelesbianlit
I couldinordertobethe
bestlesbianI couldbewhen
I cameout.WhenI first

readthescene,inmymid-
20s,I didn’t wantit tobe
artful.I wantedit tobean
instructionmanual.It does
feelgoofy toadmitthat,
butI reallywantedtodoit
correctly. Thiswasinthe
late’90sandearlyaughts.
I reada lotofupsetting
lesbianbooks;I started
withTheWellofLoneliness
andworkedmy way from
there,storieswherethe
queercouplearepunished
insomeway. Reading
thisbook,evensome 48
yearsafterit hadbeen
published,hada hugeeffect
onme—thehopefulness,

theendorsementof
Therese’s feelings.
Now, whenI rereadthe
passage,it’s themissing
anatomy that I love.
I’mfillinginthedetails.
Highsmithallowsspacefor
thereadertodothatwork
atexactlytherightmoment.
She’s takingthereaderinto
therealmoftheineffable.
Asa youngreader, that is
whatI wantedtheexperience
ofsextobelike. I knew I had
thesedesires,buttoacton
thesedesires—thatterrain
stillfeltvery fraughttome.
Sothisideathatsex wouldbe
sobeautifulI wouldn’t even

beabletofindthewordsfor
it,thatfeltvery important.
Thisscenelodgedsofirmly
inmybrainthat it bubblesup
inwaysI’mnotalwaysaware
ofwhenI’mwriting.There’s
a momentinmynew book
whenthreeofthecharacters
makeoutinanorchard,and
eachofthemis thinkingin
thesereallyspecific,sensory
termsofimagesthat they’re
goingtorememberlater.
I lovethatshift fromtactile
writingintometaphoric
writingthatallowsthereader
tofullyliveina scenesothat
it feelstrue,whichis really
whatI askoffiction. ■

d her on the lips, and pleasure leaped in Therese again as if it were

l had slipped her armunder her necklast night. I love you, Therese

by the tingling and terrifying pleasure th atspread in waves

, that rushed suddenly, the length of her body. Her arms were tight

g else, of Carol’s hand that slid along her ribs, Carol’s hair that brushed

h in widening circles that leaped further and further, beyond

s and moments, words, the first darling, the second time Carol had

s face, her voice, moments of anger and laughter flashed like the


blue distance and space, an expanding space in which she took

ross an impossibly wide abyss with ease, seemed to arc on and

t she still clung to Carol, that she trembled violently, and the arrow

Carol’s head was close against hers. And she did not have to

not have been more right or perfect. She held Carol tighter

uth. Therese lay still, looking at her, at Carol’s face only inches

hem, as if they retained some of the space she had just emerged

, with the freckles, the bending blond eyebrow that she knew, the

ny times before. ¶ ‘My angel,’ Carol said. ‘Flung out of space.’ ”
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