Are psychology books a good source of insight? Patricia Highsmith doubts it:
The spirit of playing is necessary in plotting a suspense novel to permit freedom of the imagination. It is also necessary in inventing characters. But once one has the characters in mind, and the plot, the characters should be given most serious consideration, and one should pay attention to what they are doing and why, and if one does not explain it–-and it may be artistically bad to explain too much–-then a writer should know why his characters behave as they do and should be able to answer this question to himself. It is by this that insight is born, by this that the book acquires value. Insight is not something found in psychology books; it is in every creative person. And–-see Dostoyevsky–-writers are decades ahead of the textbooks, anyway.
(Quoted from page 137 of Plotting and Writing Suspense Fiction, by Patricia Highsmith. St. Martin’s Press, 1983.)
For a brief biography of Patricia Highsmith, click here. For images of or relating to Patricia Highsmith, click here.
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