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How
To Order:
Mail Order Department,
Paramount Publishing
200 Old Tappan Road
Old Tappan, NJ 07675
Tel. 1 (800) 223-1360
Subject: Patrick Süskind's first novel,
Perfume (Das Parfum) tells the horrific story of Jean-Baptiste
Grenouille, an orphan born in Paris in 1738. When Grenouille's
abandoned body is found in the garbage, he is taken to an
orphanage, where everyone who encounters him finds something
about him to be repulsive. What they are unaware of is that
Grenouille's body does not have any aroma, a distinction which
is so subtle that nobody can place their finger on it, but
which colors Grenouille's entire life. Grenouille's strange
relationship to odors is further highlighted by his own extremely
sharp sense of smell, caused, perhaps, by the lack of necessity
to sense past his own smell. When he comes of age, Grenouille
manages to apprentice himself to a perfumer and shows a strong
aptitude for mixing strange and exotic perfumes. This skill
leads him to his desire to cover his own lack of smell and
a quest to create the most unique perfume the world has ever
known. By following Grenouille from his birth, when his mother
abandoned him to death among the discarded fish guts through
his childhood when he discovered how different he was to his
apprenticeship, Süskind is able to evoke several different
emotions from the reader, ranging from sympathy for the young
orphan to curiosity to disgust and hatred. Grenouille's lack
of aroma can be seen as representative of his lack of morals
in a world in which the amoral and the ethical were struggling
to find a new common ground. Süskind does a remarkable job
in portraying Paris of the eighteenth century, relying more
on olfactory descriptions than is common in novels, which
supports the rather odd conceit behind the narrative. He describes
Grenouille and his actions with a detached demeanor, thereby
heightening the horrific nature of Grenouille's actions by
not commenting on that nature. Perfume is a suspense novel.
Although the reader knows that Grenouille is guilty, throughout
the book the reader wonders whether and how Grenouille will
be brought to justice. The novel is also a horror novel, although
not of the slasher variety, nor of the Lovecraftian style.
Instead, Perfume is a disturbing novel for the matter of fact
way Süskind describes Grenouille's actions and motivations.
While it is clear that Grenouille is obsessed and insane,
he performs within the confines of eighteenth century French
society in a perfectly lucid manner. Süskind's book is sui
generis. Part horror, part mystery, part historical fiction,
it offers insight into the mind of the criminally insane while
speculating on the role the sense of smell plays in our lives.
Perfume can't be compared to anything written before it because
its premise is so different in many ways than what has come
before.
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