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tuō · Thomas Harris
měi guó xiàn dài měi guó  (1940niánsìyuè11rì)
jíguàn: zhōu

yuèdòutuō · Thomas Harriszài小说之家dezuòpǐn!!!
托马斯·哈里斯
  tuō · ( ThomasHarris), měi guó zhōu réncéng rèn měi lián shè zhù niǔ yuē de zhě jiān biān ji biān cǎi měi guó de zuì 'ànshì wèi xìn zhuó zhù de lǎo pái xīn wén cóng rén yuán zài 1973 nián chū bǎn běn xiǎo shuōhēi xīng tiān》, yuè dēng chàng xiāo jīn bǎnggǎi biān pāi chéng diàn yǐng fēngmǐ quán qiú。《 hóng lóng》( RoterDrache) hàn 》( Hannibal) shì de 'èr sān běn shūtóng yàng zào chéng hěn hōng dòngbìng bèi pāi chéng diàn yǐngyán hóng lóngzhùjué rén héng héng lāi shì suǒ xiě chéng dechén de gāo yáng》, chú liǎo róng huòniǔ yuē shí bào》、《 chū bǎn jiā zhōu kānpáiháng bǎng de shuāng liào guànjūn wàisuí zhe diàn yǐng zài quán qiú zhì jiào hǎo zuò jiǎng pín píngèng shǐ de shēng zhōng tiāndàn shì jīn de què ràng quán shì jiè de zhě yǐn jǐng dài duō nián hòucái zhōng tuī chū lāi shì sān de wán jié piān héng héngshí rén 》。 guǒ ránzhè zuì hòu de diān fēng jié zuò chū bǎn hōng dòng 'ōu měiyuè chàng xiāo páiháng bǎng qián máogǎi biān pāi chéng diàn yǐng tóng yàng zào 'ào rén de piào fáng jiā zhōng chén de gāo yángyǐng xiǎng zuì céng yuè dēngniǔ yuē shí bàochàng xiāo shū páiháng bǎng bǎng shǒujìn bǎng shù shí zhōu zhī jiǔgēn zhè xiǎo shuō gǎi biān de tóng míng diàn yǐng róng huò 1992 nián 64 jiè 'ào zuì jiā yǐngpiānzuì jiā dǎo yǎn děng 5 xiàng jīn xiàng jiǎng。《 huá shèng dùn yóu bàochēng shì jīn hái zài xiě zuò de zuì jiā xuán xiǎo shuō zuò jiā zài dāng qián xuán jīng sǒng xiǎo shuō de lǐng tuō · yōng yòu zhì gāo shàng qīng zhòng de zōng shī wèi


  Thomas Harris (born April 11, 1940) is an American author and screenwriter, best known for a series of suspense novels about his most famous character, Hannibal Lecter. All of his works have been made into films, the most notable being the multi-Oscar winning The Silence of the Lambs.
  
  Harris was born in Jackson, Tennessee, but moved as a child with his family to Rich, Mississippi; he had a difficult childhood, and was regarded as a loner by many of his peers. He attended Baylor University in Waco, Texas, where he majored in English and graduated in 1964. While in college, he worked as reporter for the local newspaper, the Waco Tribune-Herald, covering the police beat. In 1968, he moved to New York City to work for the Associated Press.
  
   Personal life
  Harris is perceived as reclusive in that he hasn't given an interview since 1976. At Baylor University he met and married a fellow student named Harriet. They had one daughter, Anne, before they divorced in the 1960s. Fellow novelist Stephen King has remarked that if writing is tedious for other authors, to Harris it is like "writhing on the floor in agonies of frustration", because, for him, "the very act of writing is a kind of torment". Harris remains close to his mother, Polly, and reportedly calls her every night, no matter where he is, and often discusses particular scenes from his work with her. He currently lives in South Florida with his long-term partner Pace Barnes, a publishing editor and has a summer home in Sag Harbor, New York. Harris' friend and literary agent Morton Janklow said of him: "He's one of the good guys. He is big, bearded and wonderfully jovial. If you met him, you would think he was a choirmaster. He loves cooking - he's done the Cordon Bleu exams - and it's great fun to sit with him in the kitchen while he prepares a meal and see that he's as happy as a clam. He has these old-fashioned manners, a courtliness you associate with the South
  
   Bibliography
  Black Sunday (1975)
  Red Dragon (1981)
  The Silence of the Lambs (1988)
  Hannibal (1999)
  Hannibal Rising (2006)
  
  Thomas Harris
  Like the serial killers that terrorize people in his novels Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs, Thomas Harris is an enigma. Information on his life is scarce and difficult to find, and that seems to be the way that Harris, author of three huge national bestsellers, likes it, but as with those elusive serial killers, a little information can be discovered that leads to a greater picture of the man as a whole.
  This much is known about Thomas Harris. He was born in Jackson, Tennessee, in 1940, but at a very young age, his family moved to his father's hometown of Rich, Mississippi, so his father could become a farmer. He lived and attended school there until he left for Baylor University in Waco, Texas. While pursuing an English major by day and working as a reporter at the News-Tribune by night, he met and married a fellow student named Harriet. They had one daughter, Anne, before they divorced in the 1960s.
  Harris began to pursue his writing career at this point, sending macabre stories to magazines like True and Argosy. According to friends, these stories exhibited many typical Harris trademarks, most notably his incredible attention to detail. When he graduated in 1964, he spent a brief period of time traveling through Europe before he began a job working for the Associated Press in New York, where he was a general-assignment reporter from 1968 to 1974. It was this job that would give him valuable insights into the world of crime, which he covered daily. It also led to the writing of his first novel.
  Black Sunday, published in 1975, is the story of a group of Arab terrorists who with the aid of a Vietnam veteran commandeer the Goodyear Blimp and use it in an attempt to bomb the Super Bowl. The idea for the story was concocted by Harris and two other reporters from work, Sam Maull and Dick Riley. They initially researched and began writing together, but eventually Harris took over the project. The book was sold to Putnam, and the three split the advances. It was Harris, however, who would reap the rewards of the novel. The novel received mixed reviews but became a bestseller and a popular movie, and suddenly, Harris had a new career on his hands.
  After the book's release, he devoted himself full-time to writing fiction. Unlike some suspense writers who crank out a new book each fall, Harris spends an exorbitant amount of time researching each book, striving for perfection. For that reason, his next novel, Red Dragon, was not completed until six years later in 1981. The novel tells the story of an FBI agent's search for a serial killer. More importantly, it introduced Harris' most popular character to the world: psychiatrist turned psychotic Hannibal “The Cannibal” Lecter, a man with a unique idea about what a prime cut of meat is. Red Dragon was turned into a popular movie by Michael Mann and paved the way for Harris’ most popular novel, The Silence of the Lambs.
  The Silence of the Lambs, released in 1988, is considered by many to be a masterpiece of suspense. It tells the story of a female FBI trainee named Clarice Starling's search for a crazed killer named Buffalo Bill, who is killing young women so he can use their skin to make a coat. In her quest, she comes across Lecter, who knows a lot about Buffalo Bill and is willing to trade information of his whereabouts for information about Clarice. The novel delves deep into the minds of madmen, showing that they can be mad and brilliant at the same time. It also paints a realistic portrait of a strong-willed female that has to let down her defenses and make herself vulnerable in order to capture a killer.
  The novel, like Harris'others, was a big bestseller, but it also turned into a nationwide phenomenon when Jonathan Demme adapted it to film. The film received outstanding reviews and became a box-office smash, saving movie company Orion from impending bankruptcy. All three of Harris' books enjoyed a revival with the success of the movie, but it did not stop there. After garnering numerous Academy Award nominations, The Silence of the Lambs became only the third movie ever to win the top five awards: best actor (Anthony Hopkins), best actress (Jodie Foster), best screenplay (Ted Tally), best director (Demme), and best picture. All five were deserving, but none more so than Hopkins, whose portrayal of Lecter was sheer brilliance.
  In 1999, Harris published the long-awaited sequel to The Silence of the Lambs, aptly titled Hannibal. Though critics were divided in their reaction to the novel, it too was made into a lucrative motion picture starring Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter.
  (Article updated May 2001)
  —William Streibling
  Related Links & Info
  Publications
  Novels:
  * Black Sunday. New York: Putnam, 1975.
  * Red Dragon. New York: Putnam, 1981.
  * The Silence of the Lambs. New York: St. Martin’s, 1988.
  * Hannibal. New York: Delacorte Press, 1999.
  Adaptations
  Motion Pictures:
  * Black Sunday. Dir. John Frankenheimer. Paramount, 1977.
  * Manhunter. Based on the novel Red Dragon. Dir. Michael Mann. De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, 1986.
  * The Silence of the Lambs. Dir. Jonathan Demme. Orion, 1991.
  * Hannibal. Dir. Ridley Scott. MGM Pictures/Universal Pictures, 2001.
  Stage:
  * Red Dragon. Adapted by Christopher Johnson. Performed by Chicago’s Centerstage theater group.
  Audio Books:
  * Red Dragon. Simon & Schuster Audio.
  * The Silence of the Lambs. Simon & Schuster Audio. 2 cassettes (3 hours). Abridged.
    

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