A review by outsmartyourshelf
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, by Patrick Süskind

dark slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

1.0

Jean-Baptiste Grenouille (French for frog) is born in eighteenth-century France, & immediately abandoned to die. His mother is arrested & executed, & Jean-Baptiste farmed out to various wet-nurses who all accuse him of being greedy & unnaturally without odor. Finally sent to an orphanage run by a woman with no sense of smell, Grenouille grows up to become a tanner's apprentice.

He seems hardworking & humble, with a keen sense of smell & a talent for survival, but he is scheming beneath the façade & eventually becomes apprentice to a parfumier. There his talent for recognising & combining scents put his master on the road to riches, but Grenouille is looking for the perfect scent. He finds it one day in the form of a young girl whom he murders, & this is just the start of his killings.

If there was one word to sum up this book it would be "creepy". Everything about it is just off. To me, there seemed something profoundly misogynistic about it. Some of the older women were referred to in less than complimentary terms whilst the young virgin girls were described in extremely sexualised terms (such as when a father laments that he is his daughter's father & not a stranger who could sleep with her as she is so beautiful?!!), & as smelling different to those who were no longer virginal. There was no such comparison for men.

Then there's the spontaneous orgy at an execution (I'm not even kidding), & the ending is just ridiculous. It's a book ticked off the 'To Read' list but I can't recommend it & I definitely wouldn't re-read it.

TW: cannibalism, murder, animal cruelty/death, misogyny, paedophila, stalking. 

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