The Roman satirist Martial often wrote of scent in disparaging terms: perfume, for him, was strongly equated with the ridiculous, the false, the pretentious, and – often (but not always) – the feminine. Read a few choice epigram, here.
Field Notes from Philly: Mütter Museum and Benjamin Rush Botanical Gardens

IAO director Saskia Wilson-Brown recently visited Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In her ongoing quest to visit every botanical garden, she took a moment to check out the Benjamin Rush Botanical Gardens at the Mütter Museum, tended by the oldest private medical society in the United States: the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. Here is her report from the field!
Roerich Pact: November Newsletter
Field Notes from Virginia: The Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum
Autumn Whodunnits
Guest Blog: The Connection Between Fragrance and Memory, by Jackie Edwards
Guest Blog: Sniffing the Dead, by Liam R. Findlay

Colette Planchette can talk to the dead with a supernatural sense of smell. That was the starting point for Liam R. Findlay’s novel The Doom Town Dummies, which follows the misadventures of Colette as she sniffs her way through a village of eerie shop-window dummies, aided by a ghostly best friend. Read all about it, in this guest post from Liam!







