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Write a 2 page essay on Love Three Pivotal Passages from the novel Perfume by Patrick Suskind.Download file to see previous pages...  .As the author writes all throughout the book, his style seems
Write a 2 page essay on Love Three Pivotal Passages from the novel Perfume by Patrick Suskind.
Download file to see previous pages... .As the author writes all throughout the book, his style seems to challenge normal situations and this is not any surprise and thus reflects his style of writing. Matt (16) argues that this works in part reflects styles of previous pieces of works written before such as The House of Spirits. . .As the author writes all throughout the book, his style seems to challenge normal situations and this is not any surprise and thus reflects his style of writing. Matt (16) argues that this works in part reflects styles of previous pieces of works written before such as The House of Spirits. . At the end of part two of the book in chapter thirty-four, Susskind narrates on the artificial love that Grenouille had gained from the people in the society, through the creation of a love-inducing scent and thus became famous. Through this, societal attention to the main character increased.  .People became more curious on his past encounters which he narrated as the ordeals had happened. Their attention was biased towards a sympathetic approach. This passage recounts on Grenouille’s desire to be loved by the society which he eventually gains, therefore defining him as a love-yearning character. It is a crucial moment in the development of the story since it indicates another side of the character, which makes the reader understand the character more. Other stories that come up in this passage give flashbacks to events that had happened to Grenouille without the reader’s knowledge. Susskind’s statement on “fame had spread without many tours” (148) is a simile of fame and tours.  .The motive of the character thus is to attract societal love- which does not reflect the style of the author. This piece reflects important circumstances seen in other literary works such as Great Expectations (Matt 64). .