« BOOK NEWS: Yet another Jordan "autobiography" | Main | Disraeli Avenue now available »
MORE ON MONDAY: The Poison that Fascinates by Jennifer Clement
Reviewed by Sarah Hague
Some people have a morbid fascination with death, others with the means of death. Emily Neale, half British, half Mexican, collects facts about women who poisoned others. Abandoned as a baby by her mother, she's brought up in Mexico City by her father and Mother Agata, head of the orphanage that Emily's great-grandmother founded and where Emily now often helps out.
We hear that there are saints for almost everything in a devote Catholic Mexican society that is painted with bright, evocative words : the street sellers, the market sellers, the traffic, the smog.
Interspersed with Emily's story are the facts she collects about stories of women who have killed and why. Emily knows that some things are worth killing for.
Finally she meets her cousin Santiago from a remote farm in Chihuahua who has been watching her and disturbing her things.
Jennifer Clement has made a peculiar book sensuously palatable. Emily inhabits a small, restricted world of Mexican superstition, mythology and faith. Santiago changes that world forever bringing with him love and secrets.
It's a fascinating book written with masterful ease.
Rating: 4/5
Came straight to this page? Visit www.trashionista.com for more female fiction news, reviews and interviews.
Posted by Keris Stainton on February 25, 2008 in More On Monday, Rating: 4/5, Recent Release | Permalink




