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.
Jennifer Clement is President Emerita of the human rights and freedom of expression organization PEN International and the only woman to hold the office of President (2015-2021) since the organization was founded in 1921. Under her leadership, the groundbreaking PEN International Women’s Manifesto and The Democracy of the Imagination Manifesto were created. As President of PEN Mexico (2009-2012), Clement was instrumental in changing the law to make the crime of killing a journalist a federal crime.
Clement is author of the novels A True Story Based on Lies, The Poison That Fascinates, Prayers for the Stolen, Gun Love and Stormy People as well as several poetry books including Poems and Errors, published by Kaunitz-Olsson in Sweden. Clement also wrote the acclaimed memoir Widow Basquiat on New York City in the early 1980’s and the painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, which NPR named best book of 2015 in seven different categories. Her memoir The Promised Party will be published in early 2024. Clement’s books have been translated into 38 languages and have covered topics such as the stealing of little girls in Mexico, the effects of gun violence and trafficking of guns into Mexico and Central America as well as writing about her life in the art worlds of Mexico and New York.
Clement is the recipient of Guggenheim, NEA, MacDowell and Santa Maddalena Fellowships and her books have twice been a New York Times Editor’s Choice Book. Prayers for the Stolen was the recipient of the Grand Prix des Lectrices Lyceenes de ELLE(sponsored by ELLE Magazine, the French Ministry of Education and the Maison des écrivains et de la littérature) and a New Statesman Book of the Year, picked by the Nobel Laureate Kazuo Ishiguro. Gun Love was an Oprah Book Club Selection as well as being a National Book Award and Aspen Words Literary Prize finalist. Time magazine, among other publications, named it one of the top 10 books of 2018. At NYU she was the commencement speaker for the Gallatin graduates of 2017 and she gave the Lectio Magistralis in Florence, Italy for the Premio Gregor von Rezzori. Clement is a member of Mexico’s prestigious Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte.
For Clement’s work in human rights, she was awarded the HIP Award for contribution to Latino Communities by the Hispanics in Philanthropy (HIP) Organization as well as being the recipient of the Sara Curry Humanitarian Award. Most recently, she was given the 2023 Freedom of Expression Honorary title on the occasion of World Press Day by Brussels University Alliance VUB and ULB in partnership with the European Commission, European Endowment for Democracy and UNESCO among others. Other laureates include Svetlana Alexievich, Zhang Zhan, Ahmet Altan, Daphne Caruana Galizia and Raif Badawi, among others.
Jennifer Clement was raised in Mexico where she lives. She and her sister Barbara Sibley founded and direct the San Miguel Poetry Week. Clement has a double major in anthropology and English Literature from New York University (Gallatin) and an MFA from University of Southern Maine (Stonecoast). She was named a Distinguished Alumna by the Kingswood Cranbrook School.
This book was like a rich dessert. It had a dark, velvety feel to it with its superstitions, saints and murderesses mingling into a web of intrigue, mystery, history and ancestry. Jennifer Clement has a beautifully poetic turn of phrase and when the twist hits you at the end of the book it's like having a butterfly's wing brush your face only for you to discover that it's made of steel.
The Poison that Fascinates by Jennifer Clement is a fable, a work dripping in symbolism. It builds on ancient myths (both pagan – the story of the god Quetzalcoatl is fundamental to a deeper understanding of the book – and Christian – saints are everywhere) and modern folklore, specifically the tales told about murderesses, such as Lizzie Borden, Belle Gunness, and Myra Hindley.
Our archetypical Red Riding Hood is Emily Neale, a not very typical Mexican girl of English decent. Her age is not given. She is probably about nineteen although she acts younger. But more about her later.
The Poison that Fascinates is also a mystery novel. We know whodunit, (Emily's mother, Greta, is the guilty party – she abandoned Emily when her daughter was six months old); what we don't know is why she did it. And no one can seem to get their story straight.
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
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Meh. Badly edited, with you/your mistakes, your/you're mistakes, the wrong word used once (instead of the church granting cousins who want to marry a 'dispensation', the book has the church granting 'compensation'). All this would be bearable if the story was any good, but it just wasn't very interesting. Emily wasn't a real character, and even though I'm usually terrible at guessing twists and big reveals, I could spot both the big reveal and the consequences a mile off. On the plus side, it was a quick read.
"Working as a fable, The Poison That Fascinates entwines well the lives of saints and sinners, the past and present, spinning in a dark thread of Catholic themes to pattern an enjoyable novel showing the extremes of womanhood, leading to tragic circumstances."
Po pierwsze, początkowo uważałam, że wstawki z faktami po każdym rozdziale są totalnie zbędne i zupełnie nic nie wnoszą. Na końcu przekonałam się, że niby jednak mają jakieś znaczenie i do czegoś prowadzą, jednak ich obecność dalej nie jest moim zdaniem usprawiedliwiona. To same durne wstawki, bez odniesień co o nich myśli główna bohaterka, bez jej refleksji czy odczuć na ich temat.
A jeśli chodzi o uczucia, tu pojawia się kolejny problem. Mam wrażenie, że zupełnie nie pojawiają się żadne opisy uczuć, chociażby opisy uczuć Emily, które są wręcz wymagane, by czytelnik mógł zżyć się z główną bohaterką, wejść w jej skórę, odrobinę się wczuć.
To z kolei prowadzi też do bezsensownej, niczym niepopartej fabuły. Emily z dnia na dzień "zakochuje się" w Santiago, choć przecież nie możemy dowiedzieć się, co tak naprawdę dziewczyna do niego czuje, bo dostajemy tylko suche opisy wydarzeń i działań.
Kolejnym problemem jest zupełna nieracjonalność Emily, niby tak zachowawczej i dość inteligentnej. Gdy Santiago wyznaje jej, że przez jakiś czas ją obserwował, nie pojawia się w niej żaden niepokój, strach, nawet złość. Po prostu akceptuje to, jakby było to coś normalnego. Na domiar złego już po kilku dniach Emily rozmyśla, jak to będzie gdy ucieknie z Santiago. Zna go kilka dni, nie wie, jaką osobą jest, a myśli o pozostawieniu ojca, z którym spędziła całe swoje życie.
Zakończenie niby ma sens, ale jednak go nie ma. Ma pod tym względem, że pasuje do słów matki Emily i jej działanie nie następuje kompletnie z dupy. Mimo wszystko jednak nie ma tego sensu, bo Emily nie zabiła Santiago pod wpływem emocji ani chwili, a spokojnie poszła po narzędzie zbrodni i wtedy dopiero zamordowała chłopca.
She said that her mother knew that some things were worth killing for, and going to jail for, like being lied to or spat on ~ Emily Neale
The Poison that Fascinates by Jennifer Clement
⭐⭐⭐
If ever the was a book that fits the idiom 'a wolf in sheep's clothes' it's this one. Falling in love is a magical thing, depending on who you fall in love with. All things sinful always have a thrill and enticement about them. I expected something to happen, I knew there was a surprise coming, but the plot twist still took me by surprise! __________________________
Emily Neale is a good girl. Plain and simple. She loves to read, loves to learn facts, and spends her time between helping in the orphanage her family founded and her thesis she is writing on Saints. After her mother's disappearance, Emily was raised in Mexico by her father and the nun who runs the orphanage, Mother Agatha. She lives a life praiseworthy of a nun herself. Until her Cousin Santiago arrives. Bringing with him untold secrets of the past and the undeniable pleasure of sin. __________________________
Definitely a good read. Rated 3 star's (until I find a better rating system) because of the writing style, the bombardment of facts kind of gets one lost abit
"Emily knows she is half an orphan. As a child she used to think of things that were halves of other things. She used to look up words in the dictionary: half-ripe, half-empty, a half note, half-moon, half-hearted, half-light, half-truth, half-and-half."
"Arsenic is a grey metal. Grey as grey clouds. Grey as grey pavement. At her confession, she said, 'If ghosts are in this room they're either drunk or sleeping.'"
"In Mexico City during the dry season everything in the city seems to turn into stone--stone birds, stone flowers, stone butterflies. The sun warms the red pockmarked volcanic stone and the cement buildings and pavements burn. In the rainy season the city becomes molten, streets turn into rivers that carry plastics, newspaper, dry willow leaves, small shards of volcanic glass. The volcanoes and mountains that surround Mexico City are like the walls of a fortress that keep everyone out and keep everyone in."
My 3rd J. Clements novel. And as enjoyable as always. She is officially one of my favorite writers.
SPOILER ALERT: The ending!! What I am supposed to to make of it? Did she kill her father and made it look like her brother did it. But why? Or she planned to get rid of her brother. But why then in his own clothes? Has anyone an idea??
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Very special novel...dark and intriguing. It’s hard to put it down, as you know something very bad is going to happen...a very nice girl turns into a murderer.
Mujer, mujer divina tienes el veneno que fascina en tu mirar…
Si alguno de nuestros lectores gusta de la música del cantante mexicano Agustín Lara, sin duda alguna ha oído esta canción. Pues bien, es de ahí, que Clement se inspira para dar nombre a este libro.
El veneno que fascina, cuyo título original es “The poison that fascinates”, es un libro lleno de canciones, creencias, historias y escenarios de nuestro México que para quienes conozcan esos lugares, sin duda recrearán con gusto en su memoria al leer el libro y para quienes no los conozcan, les dará la oportunidad de acercarse más a esos espacios, mediante las magnificas descripciones que hace la autora, sin caer, sin embargo, en exotismos o parafernalias.
Jennifer Clement es una poetisa y –aunque he leído un solo libro de ella-, puedo decir que su prosa -poética- en muchos sentidos es precisa, épica, fluida…
“En la estación lluviosa, en cambio, la ciudad se derrite. Las calles se convierten en ríos que transportan plásticos, periódicos y hojas secas de los sauces y pequeños fragmentos de vidrio volcánico. Los volcanes y las montañas que rodean la Ciudad de México son como los muros de una fortaleza: no dejan entrar ni salir a nadie”
El libro está narrado en tercera persona, en tiempo presente. Y su protagonista es Emily Neale. Una joven mexicana, descendiente de ingleses. Emily vive con su padre, pues su madre desapareció misteriosamente. La familia de ella eran dueños de unas minas de plata y más tarde, su abuela fundó el Orfanato Rosa de Lima, donde Emily ha pasado gran parte de su vida. La madre Ágata –una mujer enorme, de grandes manos, que vestida con su hábito de monja, se parece a un ángel colosal al que la gente acude en busca de sombra o cobijo-, es quien dirige el orfanato desde poco antes de la desaparición de la madre de Emily.
Emily es estudiante de Historia en la UNAM, y prepara su tesis sobre la vida de los santos y cómo estas creencias influyen en las personas. Al ser una niña solitaria, su vida estado plagada de una soledad infinita que su padre ha intentado llenar. Por eso, ella sólo pasa su tiempo entre la escuela, el orfanato y su casa. Emily colecciona también algunas cosas, entre ellos, relatos de asesinas. Su fascinación por las historias donde mujeres han llevado a cabo homicidios, podría parecer desconcertante, pero, la autora ha tenido a bien, concluir cada capítulo con el resumen de estos hechos; haciéndonos así, partícipes de esta obsesión. Cada relato es narrado desde un ángulo diferente, lo que le da un aire de espontaneidad al libro.
Esta novela habla de mentiras, de misterios, de desapariciones y verdades a medias.
“Desaparecida” es una palabra de doce letras. Desaparecida como un anillo perdido o un jersey, o una cucharilla. “Desvanecida” es una palabra de once letras. Desvanecida como la niebla y el rocío del amanecer. Desvanecida en el sombrero de un mago. “Perdida.” Perdida es una palabra de siete letras. Perdida en la lámpara de un genio…
“Nunca te he mentido, pero tampoco te he contado nunca la verdad” ¿Qué hacer cuando las mentiras que han regido nuestra vida, son desveladas en el peor momento? ¿Qué sucede cuando te enamoras de la persona equivocada? ¿Qué harían si supieran que su vida, de un día para otro, se ha vuelto un callejón sin salida?
Emily enfrenta una verdadera encrucijada cuando todo se descubre. Cuando conoce el secreto que guarda Santiago, su primo, el mismo hombre de quien ella se ha enamorado. Y la decisión que toma, puede en cierta medida, resultar escalofriante justificada… o no.
El personaje de Emily me parecía muy frágil. Se me hacía una mujer sumisa, perdida en sus creencias, en la previsibilidad y monotonía de su vida. Hasta que llega Santi y cambia mucho de lo que ella es o siente.
Santiago era extraño. Durante toda la trama te debates entre aceptar que ¿la ama? O ¿la odia? Creo que las dos cosas. Creo que al final, se puede entender el por qué de esa relación enfermiza. Al final, puedes realmente entender por qué él se comportaba de tal o cuál manera. Yo, al menos, pude comprenderlo, más no justificarlo.
Jennifer Clement hizo de “El veneno que Fascina” una historia trepidante, caótica, que te dirige sin darte cuenta al punto álgido de la historia para hacer que seas tú, quien escriba el final. Quien decida si lo último que se cuenta, es lo que verdaderamente ha sucedido.
Sé que estoy siendo muy pero muy críptica, pero no deseo arruinarles la lectura de una novela que muestra muchos de los matices de la feminidad, desde la bondad hasta la crueldad y la locura de las asesinas. Muchos han dicho que las mujeres tienen el poder de levantar o de derrocar imperios, y en esta novela, una mujer, es quien destruye, de una u otra forma; tal vez sin quererlo, a una familia entera.
En resumen, el libro me encantó y guardaré mi ejemplar con mucho cariño por que la historia es magnífica. Y me llevó a experimentar muchos sentimientos encontrados. Una lectura genial para quien busca algo diferente que leer.
I did a poetry-writing workshop with Clement in Mexico a couple years ago and she did a reading from this book that was quite captivating. Prose by poets can be a bit precious, but there is an intimacy and inventiveness to her writing that can be wonderful. But despite my respect for Clement's talent, I can't say this 100% works as a novel. Because of the snippets from news articles about women killers in history that are woven into the story, it's not remotely a surprise when the main character kills her controlling boyfriend. It is a small book that I recommend in a lukewarm fashion, but I still would like to read her The Widow Basquiat.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The language of this book is so rich and absorbing I was pulled in from the first page. I could almost taste every word, sentence, paragraph as it rolled through my eyes into my nervous system. Dubbed a "fable" rather than a novel, the tale of Emily Neale, a Mexican of English descent who collects facts about saints and about female killers (I was reminded of Edward Gorey's "Neglected Murderesses") moves quickly and keeps you reading even as it turns toward the dark. The darkness--and my having guessed some of the secrets perhaps too soon--made me give this four stars rather than five. If four and a half were an option, I would have done that! I cannot wait to read more by Clement.
A very strange little book. The style reminded me a bit of Jeanette Winterson, but darker and more sinister. Somehow, the book didn't quite come together for me despite the interesting elements and lyrical prose. The facts about female murderers were interesting and provided a nice backdrop for the story of this strange British family living in Mexico City. But the main character, Emily Neale, never really came alive enough for me to be that interested in her story.
Potrei definire questo romanzo con solo una parola: "Strano" (ma strano forte!), certi momenti come: Lui che succhia i capelli di lei...ma come fa? Non soffoca? Però il finale...beh, il finale mi è piaciuto tanto. (Anche perchè Santi, in alcuni momenti, mi stava proprio sul *****)
Finishing jennifer clements books are like waking from a beautiful and simple dream. Nothing complicated or egotistical, yet other worldly and very original.
Very strange book, this reminded me a bit of the Latin American surrealists (Marquez, Borges, etc)- not only because of the setting in Mexico. It's a quick read actually, but rather creepy.