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Poison That Fascinates [Hardcover]

Jennifer Clement (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

January 17, 2008
Emily is obsessed with peculiar facts and Catholic saints. Abandoned by her mother as a child, she now lives with her father in Mexico City, working in the local orphanage. When a mysterious cousin, Santi, appears on the doorstep, he brings with him family secrets, and soon Emily finds desire and temptation have overturned her straightforward life forever."The Poison that Fascinates" is an alluring fable forged in astonishing, sensuous prose. Jennifer Clement conjures a world heavy with the weight of Mexican superstition, mythology and faith, where saintliness and mortal sin sit side by side.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"* 'Jennifer Clement writes like a painter. Her books are vivid with colour and detail, and reading The Poison That Fascinates is like leafing through a folio of portraits, each colour-soaked page leading us irresistibly to the next, giving us fresh vision as to how stories can be made.' - Kirsty Gunn, author of Featherstone and The Boy and the Sea * 'You would be forgiven for mistaking Clement's novel for a book of poetry, such is its lyricism and lightness of touch... Clement's simple lilting prose poetry belies a dark complexity hidden below the surface and draws the reader on to the book's chilling conclusion.' - The Times, on A True Story based on Lies * 'This is an unusual and graceful book that, in beautiful and precise prose, tells of unimaginable human suffering and manages, in an unexpected climax, to suggest at least the possibility of redemption.' - New Internationalist * 'Jennifer clement threads silky imagery through dense subject matter in a novel/novella with the hybrid vigour of literary experimentation.' - Scotland on Sunday"

About the Author

Jennifer Clement is a poet, biographer and novelist. Her work has appeared in numerous anthologies. She was part of the NYC art scene during the early eighties but she now lives in Mexico City. She was recently the recipient of the Systema Nacional de Credadores, a grant awarded in Mexico for outstanding contributions to literature, whose previous recipients include Carlos Fuentes and Octavio Paz. She is also co-founder and director of the San Miguel Poetry Week.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 231 pages
  • Publisher: Canongate Books Ltd (January 17, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1841959790
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841959795
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,174,433 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jennifer Clement studied English Literature and Anthropology at New York University and also studied French literature in Paris, France. She is currently the President of PEN Mexico.

Clement is the author of the memoir Widow Basquiat that made the "Booksellers' Choice" list in the United Kingdom and two novels: A True Story Based on Lies, which was a finalist in the Orange Prize for Fiction in the United Kingdom, and The Poison That Fascinates. She is also the author of several books of poetry: The Next Stranger (with an introduction by W.S. Merwin), Newton's Sailor, Lady of the Broom and Jennifer Clement: New and Selected Poems. Her prize-winning story A Salamander-Child has been published as an art book with work by the Mexican painter Gustavo Monroy. Clement's work has been translated into 10 languages.

Jennifer Clement won the Canongate Prize for her story A Salamander-Child. In 2007 she received a MacDowell Fellowship and the MacDowell Colony named her the Robert and Stephanie Olmsted Fellow for 2007-08. In 2009 she was nominated for a Pushcart Prize and was named the Thornton Writer-in-Residence at Lynchburg College, USA.


Clement was awarded Mexico's prestigious "Sistema Nacional de Creadores" grant and in 2001 and she is also the recipient of a US-Mexico Fund for Culture (FONCA, Fundacion Cultural Bancomer, the Rockefeller Foundation) grant for the San Miguel Poetry Week, which she founded in 1997 with her sister, Barbara Sibley.


Clement's work has appeared in numerous anthologies including The Best of The American Voice and Akzente, The London Times, The Herald, Poetry London, The Nation, The American Poetry Review, National Geographic, The Warwick Review and The Independent Magazine, among others, have published her stories, poems and essays. Recently, the composer Jan Gilbert created an "Eleven Song Setting" of Clement's The Lady of the Broom for soprano, flute, viola, and violoncello.

Jennifer Clement lives in Mexico City, Mexico.

 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tale of mystery, set in Mexico. You will not put it down., July 15, 2009
This review is from: Poison That Fascinates (Paperback)
The "Poison" will seep into you with a quiet, unspoken suspense. We enter the lives of a British family in Mexico City and the psychology of how loss and mystery have affected Emily Neale and her father. There are strange
juxtapositions to consider; facts of saints and murderers and collections of butterflies that no longer fly because
they have disappeared. There is big hearted Mother Agata, who runs an orphanage and strange Santiago who comes to the Neales. This tale comes alive in Mexico, its sounds, smells and foreign flavor fascinate. All told
by Clement; writer, poet and enchantress.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mother Agata, Mexico City, Marybeth Tinning, Emily Neale, Agustin Lara, Cousin Emily, Mary Ann Cotton, United States, Maria Felix, Myra Smith, Rosa of Lima Orphanage, Mexico Tenochtitlan, Real del Monte, Joseph Tinning, Saint Barbara, Monastery of the Dwarves, Marti Enriqueta
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