272 Pages, Knopf Doubleday, ISBN-13: 978-0375725845
I read Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Süskind for a history course on the French Revolution; my Prof. assigned it not so much for its subject matter – more on that in a minute – but because of how the writer described pre-Revolutionary Paris, especially its awful slums. And make no mistake, Paris under the ancien régime comes to life once more under Süskind’s pen (keyboard?) in all its filthy glory. It turns out that Perfume was also Kurt Cobain’s favorite book, and upon completion of this bleak work I could see why. In the man’s own words, “I’ve read Perfume about ten times and I can’t stop reading it. It’s like something that’s just stationary in my pocket all the time. It just doesn’t leave me. I read it over and over. It just effects me”. Depending on what you think of Cobain, this is either an echoing endorsement or a resounding rejection.
Perfume follows the life of Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, a person born with a seemingly supernatural sense of smell in a world in which he is forsaken and unloved. Given birth by his mother at a market stall among rotting fish guts and the stench of corpses – she even uses a fish knife to cut the umbilical cord – Grenouille is eventually discovered in the street, covered in flies and offal (his mother is found and executed for infanticide). Thus orphaned at birth, he is passed between wet nurses, one of whom, Jeanne Bussie, saying of him: “He’s possessed by the devil…This baby makes my flesh creep because it doesn’t smell the way children ought to smell… like fresh butter”. Loved by none and unwanted by all, Jean-Baptiste grows to hate humanity as much as humanity hates him. In so many respects he was damned from the very beginning.
Eventually, Grenouille lands an apprenticeship with a perfumer where that remarkable nose of his can truly come into its own. As he learns his craft and eventually eclipses his employer, he aspires to become the greatest perfumer of the age, an olfactory artisan par excellence whose creations move their wearers like no perfume ever has before. Indeed, it is Grenouille’s ambition to create scents that are so overwhelming that they will allow him to control them and bend them to his will even – and this is key to his motivation – force them to love him. But in order for this godly scent to come into creation, Grenouille must harvest the most pure, delightful and innocent scents from their source – and that source is living, virgin girls. The lengths he goes to in order to bring forth his obsession are monstrous, but what obsessive can corral his demons?
This is grim stuff, and so I find it eminently believable that Kurt Cobain drew inspiration from it for Nirvana’s 1993 album In Utero; the second song, Scentless Apprentice, draws directly from the novel with lyrics such as, “Like most babies smell like butter/His smell smelled like no other/He was born scentless and senseless/Every wet nurse refused to feed him” and a chorus that shrieks “Go away/Get away”, coming from a line in the novel in which “Grenouille no longer wanted to go somewhere, but only to go away, away from human beings”. On could easily argue that many more songs on In Utero were inspired by Perfume, but I won’t belabor the point. As I said above, Cobain’s love of this novel may serve either as a recommendation or a damnation; for me it was neither, as I viewed the thing through its own prism.
Perfume is one of those books that sticks with you, whether you want them to or not. There can be no doubt that Süskind’s descriptive powers are second to none, and that the character he created and the tale he crafted affects one for their sheer detail if nothing more. Paris under the kings comes alive, Grenouille himself virtually walks off the pages and the scents he creates virtually waft around the reader as he takes it all in. And the murders…the murders of all of those young girls strike at one’s heart, so much so that you wish you could reach into the page and throttle Grenouille before he can harm anyone else. I guess I can see how Cobain was inspired by this dark work, but as to why he carried a copy with him everywhere always escapes me – then again, I’m not a drug-addled manic depressive with black thoughts.





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