• Marya – the protagonist of
Jean Rhys's semi-autobiographic debut novel,
Quartet (Chatto and Windus, 1928) – asks a young woman in the Paris demimonde she frequents whether she wears the
Coty fragrance Chypre. • In
Aldous Huxley's
Brave New World (1932), the main female character, Lenina Crowne, “dabbed herself with chypre” after drying off from a bath. • Raymond Chandler's
The Lady in the Lake (Knopf, 1943) mentions a chypre-scented, monogrammed handkerchief. • In
Lawrence Durrell's
Alexandria Quartet (
Mountolive, first published in 1958), the protagonist, British diplomat David Mountolive, recognizes the "nervous handwriting" of his one-time lover, Leila Hosnani, on an envelope smelling of chypre. • In the novel
The Maltese Falcon, the character Joel Cairo (an elegant criminal) wears a chypre fragrance. • In the
1941 movie adaptation, chypre is replaced with gardenia. • One of the two physical editions of
Le Sserafim's
Fearless is given the subtitle "Blue Chypre". • In
Thomas Pynchon's novel
Bleeding Edge, a character who is a professional "Nose" mentions "People who wouldn’t know a floral from a chypre". ==Style, concept==