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Loading... Baudolinoby Umberto Eco
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. The story centers around the (re)making of the legend of Prester John (cf. The Travels of John Mandeville) and the wonders of the east, as known to the mind of the medieval scholastic. To me, the plot lacked the momentum of The Name of the Rose, but Eco's verbal playfulness, polysemy and knowledge of European history kept me delightfully charmed throughout. ( )The novel starts out promising, powered by Eco's great gift for conjuring up vivid images of past cultures, in this case medieval Italy. But about half way through the novel changes character plunging into an overdrive of fantastical events and figures. I wasn't convinced. This was the fastest 500+ page book I have ever read. Perhaps I have something for liars.. Baudolino's tale was full of the most unbelievable adventures, yet I fell for it all and couldn't wait for more. Eco is truly is master storyteller. A phrase used to describe 'Foucault's Pendulum' also aptly describes 'Baudolino:' "endlessly diverting." It is at once fascinating history, bawdy farce, riveting mystery, and profound allegory. the Forrest Gump of Byzantium, Baudolino always seems to find himself in the midst of earth-changing history with no hope of having his role acknowledged. a teller of tall tales and general scoundrel our hero is likable but not to be taken without skepticism. a rollicking read, enjoyable if stilted at times. 0.024 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0156029065, Paperback)The most playful of historical novelists, Umberto Eco has absorbed the real lesson of history: that there is no such thing as the absolute truth. In Baudolino, he hands his narrative to an Italian peasant who has managed, through good luck and a clever tongue, to become the adopted son of the Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, and a minister of his court in the closing years of the 12th century. Baudolino's other gift is for spontaneous but convincing lies, and so his unfolding tale--as recounted in 1204 to a nobleman of Constantinople, while the fires of the Fourth Crusade rage around them--exemplifies the Cretan Liar's Paradox: He can't be believed. Why not, then, make his story as outrageous as possible? In the course of his picaresque tale, Baudolino manages to touch on nearly every major theme, conflict, and boondoggle of the Middle Ages: the Crusades; the troubadours; the legend of the Holy Grail; the rise of the cathedral cities; the position of Jews; the market in relics; the local rivalries that made Italy so vulnerable to outside attack; and the perennial power struggles between the pope and the emperor. With the help of alcohol and a mysterious Moorish concoction called "green honey," Baudolino and his ragtag friends engage in typical scholastic debates of the period, trying to determine the dimensions of Solomon's Temple and the location of the Earthly Paradise. And when the Emperor needs support in his claims for saintly lineage, who but Baudolino can craft the perfect letter of homage from the legendary Prester John, Holy (and wholly fictitious) Christian King of the East? A giddy and exasperating romp, Baudolino will draw you into its labyrinthine inventions and half-truths, even if you know better. --Regina Marler(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:25 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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