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Poison Jasmine

Page history last edited by Jon 11 years, 8 months ago

Clason, Clyde B - Poison Jasmine (1940)

 

Clyde B. Clason's Poison Jasmine (1940) involves murder among perfume manufacturers. While other Clason mysteries are set among art collectors, Poison Jasmine has a background of science and technology, instead. It is a scientific detective story. The main crimes involve poisoning, and these too are scientific in nature. The science in Poison Jasmine often involves plants; Clason's knowledge of botany will return in Green Shiver. Sleuth Theocritus Lucius Westborough also has much information on perfumery in the ancient world. Poison Jasmine is one of Clason's books in which Westborough's career as a classical historian is best integrated into the novel.

 

The book's look at a business as a background for a crime also resembles Rex Stout. As in Stout, we have a group of suspects that work as officers and consultants for a small, successful business. They are upper middle class, educated people of considerable business skill. Stout's businesses tend to have an intellectual feel, such as a design firm, publishing or broadcasting. Clason's perfume firm is steeped in cultural traditions of the world of scent production.

Unlike some other Clason works, Poison Jasmine does not recreate another culture. It does offer a sympathetic, anti-racist account of the Chinese chef, which is in accord with the anti-racist views expressed in Clason's other fiction.

 

Poison Jasmine has a simple, but effective impossible crime puzzle. (SPOILERS) It anticipates ideas John Dickson Carr will use in The Nine Wrong Answers (1952) (END OF SPOILERS).

 

Poison Jasmine shows Clason's flair for color imagery. Both the flowers, and events of the mystery plot, are described in color terms.

 

Agatha Christie in The Big Four (1924) included a section called "The Yellow Jasmine Mystery" (Chapters 9-10). This deals with the same poisonous plant that gives the title to Poison Jasmine.

 

Poison Jasmine seems padded. Like many mystery novels, it would have been better as a novella. Most of the meat of both the mystery plot and perfume background are in Part Two, Part Three: Sections 1,2,6, Part Four: Sections 3-6, 8, Part Five: Sections 1 and 4, Part Nine: Sections 1 and 3. These sections total around seventy pages.

 

Mike Grost

 

History of Mystery: http://mikegrost.com/classics.htm

The Jacob Black Impossible Crime stories: http://mikegrost.com/mymyst.htm

 

See also: http://www.classicmysteries.net/2009/03/poison-jasmine.html

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