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Odors Sweet and Foul


Article # : 12739 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 3 / 1987  1,198 Words
Author : Robert Geary
Robert Geary is head of the department of English at James Madison University.

       PERFUME
       The Story of a Murderer
       Patrick Suskind
       New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986
       255 pp., $16.95
       
        With an intriguing, indeed an intimidating, barrage of publicity, Knopf announced the publication of the English translation of Patrick Suskind's Perfume: The Story of a Murderer. "A first novel unlike anything you have ever read...an international phenomenon...a major bestseller" in France and Germany since its 1985 appearance, raves the publisher's flyer. Blurbs from European reviewers are similarly ecstatic, though vague, likening the main character to, variously, Faust, Quasimodo, and Gunter Grass's Oskar Matzerath and seeing in the thirty-seven-year-old German author shades of Voltaire, de Sade, Umberto Eco, and the South American practitioners of "magic realism." With this introduction and the promise of a captivating mixture of historical novel, horror thriller, and fable of deep (if unspecified) import, the novel became at once a book club selection and a best seller.
       
        From the opening page, the book fascinates as we follow the "gifted and abominable personage" who is its main character. In Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, born in 1738 to a Paris fishmonger beheaded for trying to do away with him, we meet a creature who inspires fear and loathing in nearly all who come near him, for the lacks a human smell. What he does possess is a superhuman ability to detect and recall every kind of odor: He is a prodigy of scents. Surviving on spite, the endures a mean upbringing from a miserly nurse (who has no sense of smell) and a brutal apparenticeship to ... (1999 of 7295 Characters)
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