Jasmine Nights – A Study Guide

 

jasmine-nights-sp-somtowTitle of the Book: Jasmine Nights
Author’s name: S.P. Somtow (Somtow Papinian Sucharitkul)
Genre: semi-autobiographical novel
Year when the action takes place: 1963
Setting: Bangkok, Thailand

Justin, the main character:

  • an inquisitive boy
  • “I am an alien here” (p.2)
  • “life is … a slide show: a compendium of perpetually frozen images, smells, sounds” (p.13)
  • “I manufacture my own past” (p.80)
  • “Yet I, too, have a dream… it is merely a dream of me and Wilbur and Piet and Virgil and Piak all sitting together in the treehouse…” (p.320)

Style of writing:

  • short chapters
  • a lot of Greek mythology references
  • movie references: Hitchcock’s Psycho, Spartacus
  • although it is the story of a 12-year old boy, Justin is often too mature for his age (e.g. “I am gazing at the Platonic ideal of woman” – p.87)

Stereotypes:

  • “Everyone knows that all you farang are sex-crazed maniacs.” (p.117)

Comparison The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain:

  • Coming of age novels: Both novels trace the moral education of a young boy whose better impulses overcome both self-interest and the negative forces of his culture.
  • The klong and the river, a constant presence: Huck’s journey down the river has become part of American mythology, and the issues of freedom and responsibility he confronts still concern American culture.
  • The treehouse and the raft. After Huck meets Jim on Jackson’s Island, the two travel down river on a raft that comes to symbolize their brotherhood and freedom, just as Justin’s treehouse.

The Matrix analogy:

  • “I am a creature of two worlds” (p.1)
  • “Such metamorphoses belong to the realm of myth and it is only now that I begin to see that there is between the real world and the dream world a clearly marcated boundary.” (p.335)

Reference: P.S. Somtow, Jasmine Nights, Asia Books, 2001

Author V.M. Simandan

is a Beijing-based Romanian positive psychology counsellor and former competitive archer

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Join the discussion 2 Comments

  • Somtow says:

    I’m very tickled to see a study guide to my book on here and I would like to say that I find all this quite interesting. However, I have to tell you that (since this particular novel is largely autobiographical) that when I was 12 I had no trouble framing sentences about Platonic ideals. I rather think that, despite having absorbed so much from books, Justin’s quite IMmature for his age in many ways (esp compared to kids today). The Twain comparison is very apposite and indeed quite deliberate, but I never once thought of “The Matrix”, perhaps because the book was written before the movie came out. However there are similar ideas in the writings of the cyberpunk movement. Best SPS

    PS The book is written in short chapters because it was serialized in the Bangkok Post and each chapter was not allowed to be longer than 2000 words … and HAD to end in a cliffhanger.

  • Dear Mr. Somtow,

    Thank you for you comments and clarifications.

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V.M. Simandan