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The Name of the Rose: including Postscript to the Name of the Rose

The Name of the Rose: including Postscript to the Name of the Rose

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Out of my league
Review: I am out of my league here, this used to be a place where the average reader would say what hi thought about the books, now I feel like I am at a table with PhDs and I I can do I think that if I would offer my contrasting viewpoint, it would comeback with a spin I could not handle.
So, since there are plenty of scholarly reviews, I will just tell you that I loved this book, I am not going to pretend I understood all of it, but we all get different things from books.
Some could say that you need a background in 14th century society to understand it, and perhaps you might, but I found that the popular knowledge of what life used to be like in that era was enough for me to enjoy the "trama" of the book.
I took a day off from work to read the books, since I could not put it down.
I really like it. Hope you enjoy the book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Smart Book
Review: This novel was quite impressive. Let me preface this review with a qualification: Eco is hopelessly pedantic and pretentious - quite pleased with his own intelligence (I used to read his weekly editorial in an Italian magazine when I lived in Italy 5 years ago). As a result, the book is littered with lengthy digressions in Latin - with no translation in sight... yes, very frustrating. Eco is not an author that will use one word where one word will do; he is more likely to use twenty words where one will do.

This qualification aside, I definitely suggest you give the novel a try - this mystery is infinitely more intelligent than many you'll find nowadays... just skip the more pedantic rants interspersed t/o the text.

Since a monk is being killed a day, the novel sets up a clear sense of urgency that propels you, the reader, to keep reading. The two sleuths solve the mystery via an illuminating display of logic (a la Bacon, Aquinas, and Aristotle) - Eco describes Brother Williams' application of these philosophies with great facility... simply brilliant.

One of the things that entertained me the most was the maps of the library - its labyrinthine layout and potential for homicidal mischief. The conclusion also cleverly raises some very interesting issues about the role of the Church in medieval Europe and "public" education.

Eco's ability to weave a brilliant mystery story is unparalleled, neither is his intelligence questionable... but this is not a light read. However, in my opinion, it is definitely worth a read. In many ways, Eco's novels elevate the intellectual caliber of the "mystery" genre.

Note: I haven't read the postscript. Also, don't watch the movie... definitely underrates the quality of the novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dazzling.
Review: I knew nothing of this book when I opened it; I had picked it up literally because I needed something to read and I liked the cover. It completely blew away my expectations. Eco does a stunning job of depicting daily life in the past, even daily life gone awry. This book takes you back in time into the world of the monks, a world that is incredibly deep, lush, and detailed. The characters and the motifs give this plot great flavor; they are all well-developed. Eco narrates with the confidence of an eyewitness observer and clearly knows what he is talking about. Yes, the book is a challenging read, one which will be time consuming. If you're looking for something light and quick, this isn't it. Even so, a lack of knowledge of history or Latin or religion will not keep you from enjoying this book; while I was reading it, the characters themselves taught me about their world. Try to view those background-knowledge challenges as something that makes this book good enough to read twice, and enjoy it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: for the questioning mind
Review: this book was my answer to NaNoWriMo (a national endeavor in which people write a novel in the month of november). i vowed to finish the book in a month or bust. As it turned out, I read it in a little over a week, and spent that time running around praising it to the heavens.

I readily acknowledge that it might not appeal to the common tastes. It's very dense, there's a lot of history and latin passages that aren't glossed or explained. It presupposes an interest in late medieval history, without which you'll get bored before the mystery really kicks in.

That aside, Name of the Rose really packs a punch. Eco's monastery is flawlessly recreated (read the postscript for more insight into this aspect of the novel), the tone is dead-on, and the mystery is chilling and well-wrought.

The library brooding at the center of the story is both a wonderful focus and an apt allegorical anchor for the philosophies that are woven through the story. Borges' short stories come to mind - the authors share the same gift for creating settings that seem to have their own evil intentions.

You can't expect an easy read from this book. You CAN expect an intelligent, well-written, deeply interesting journey into the medieval mind. Enjoy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best
Review: I read The Name of the Rose over twelve years ago and it remains my favorite novel. It is a fascinating reading experience which immerses the reader in its world.

Prior to reading the novel, I could never understand the appeal of monastic life. The Name of the Rose not only showed the appeal, but showed the cleverness of medieval monks in creating their cloistered world.

And, as is the sign of a truly good book, when finishing the last lines, I did feel a bit of remorse for the experience having just ended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: magnificent
Review: IFollowing one review published here,I would like to note I do understand that some poeple do not have time and energy to read some books, but that doesnot allowed them to speak about the book just because they`ve heard it is valuable to read.

I have read "The name of the rose" and find it very intriguing and written with tremendeous skill. Umberto Eco is one of the best novelist in the world. Not to many novelist are condsider good these days (if we speak about level of Tolstoy or Dostoyevski). What I find most fascinated regarding Eco`s novels, particulary this one is that "smell" of middle century. Literally you can feel the atmosfere of the monastery and the dialogues are beyond the ordinary...

At the end, no one can read Dostoyevski but everyone can read Helen Fielding. I dont want to insult but that does not means she will be remmembered.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Reading this book is hard work
Review: I was a bit surprised to see how highly most reviewers rated this book. A quick review this morning revealed the following:

4 people rated "The Name of the Rose" with 1 star
4 people rated it 2 stars
3 people rated it 3 stars
24 people rated it 4 stars, and
a whopping 134 people rated it 5 stars.

I'm not sure what all of that means, except that I disagree with at least 138 of the reviewers of this book.

This is not an excellent book, nor is it a horrible book. It is a book that requires a tremendous amount of work and patience from the reader. I've found that I just don't have the patience or energy for it right now, so I'm going to put it aside until some other time when I might.

A reviewer below suggests that this book may not be for readers who regularly enjoy Grisham or Patterson. Well, this reader enjoys Borges, Woolf, Steinbeck, Wharton, Kundera, and Alice Walker, and it was not, as far as I could tell, for me either. The religious history was not presented in a way that engaged my interest. I find the 'investigator' William, interesting and sympathetic, and yet I don't quite trust him and I find his motives suspect. In addition, the "talking heads" way in which much of the history is presented (ie - William speaking nonstop for several pages to Adso about an event or the characters of several different religious groups) just felt awkward and unrealistic.

Eco's attention to detail can be truly mind-numbing, especially for this reader, who tends to read in bed at the end of the day. It took me four weeks to get through the first hundred pages because I couldn't give my attention to more than about 4 pages a night. I was just too tired. This is not a book to read when you are tired.

I would recommend this book to anyone who has:
1) an interest in Catholic or religious history
2) plenty of mental energy to devote to it
and 3) a reasonable amount of time to read each day

If the above doesn't describe you, tread carefully down this particular path.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More than just a murder mystery
Review: "The Name of the Rose" is quite the interesting book, and somewhat demanding of the reader. As Eco claims in the postscript, it is written in such a way as to require the reader to approach the story on the book's terms, at the pace of the time it depicts. It is also written as a sort of game played with the reader. The effect is enthralling and challenging.

Since the story is essentially a murder mystery, you wind up approaching the story with a detective's eye, attempting to solve the crimes alongside one of the principal characters, a Sherlock Holmes-like inquisitor named William. What really sets this particular story apart, however, is how Eco has anchored the story, the setting, the story's manner of telling, even its language in some ways, firmly in the Medieval era. Eco himself claims to be a staunch Medievalist, even viewing the present world through a medieval eye, and that bias shines through in the story.

The reader is left with both a compelling story and a multi-layered riddle consisting of church history, architectural puzzles, and riddles of language to solve. And I was just expecting a good murder mystery set in the middle ages.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Close off a system and all hell breaks loose
Review: For a real kick, read The Name of the Rose and Il Nome della Rosa side by side. (Seriously.)

Umberto Eco excels at the grand, old-fashioned parlor murder mystery--while depicting the corruption of a closed (very closed) society. As usual he names and enumerates our baser side as humans and winnows out those rare moments of transcendental grace--entertaining all the while.

Eco is a master at picking apart what appears to be a smoothly functioning machina~only to reveal the putrid, gooey center that cloistering preserves.

This was for me a swift, gratifying read--and it is one of my top ten books to read repeatedly. While it is his scope that I enjoy--I most appreciate his artful eye. Reading The Name of the Rose is quite literally a cinematic experience...don't bother seeing the movie (Sorry Sean.)

Not that it matters: but, I developed an interest in St Francis after reading this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Serious Novel for Serious People?
Review: First, a warning: Umberto Eco's "The Name of the Rose" is, at times, as daunting as the intellect of the man who wrote it. Eco, armed with his almost unique flare for combining philosophy and history, sets out to recount the mysterious, and sinisters, events occuring over a week long period in an Italian monastery in 1327. The premise and events are deliciously obscure, the solution far superior to your average who-dunnit climax.

Second, a fanfare of trumpets: the film was a great big, historically accurate flop. But that was because it was trying to be a big, historically accurate book and that was never going to work. Yes, the prose is dense, and yes, there are several paragraphs written wholly in latin without translation, but the novel overall is so rewarding that ploughing through it proves worth it. The characterisation of William of Baskerville, with his enormously proud intellect and his dry, satirical sense of humour, is quite classic. Adso the self-starring narrator-come-sleuthing novice is innocently fervent, while still retaining his seedier lusty boy-self. The remaining cast? A virtuoso performance of character studies and cameos (take special notice of the Bishop of Kaffa, the man who is still alive despite all piously hopeful statements to the contrary). And far from being a book for serious people, there are some crack-you-up, laugh-out-loud moments from the stand-up act that is Wlliam of Baskerville.

Third, beautiful and terrible as an army arrayed for battle: Eco is exploring some very deeply interesting philosophical statements concerning human nature in "The Name of the Rose" and he leaves you to puzzle out their origins. Find the mirror in yourself and hold it up - what does it show you about human nature, whether its mediaeval or modern-day?

In a nutshell: settle down in the cold of winter, focus and dive in...and don't expect satisfaction until you've worked your way through the labyrinth and found the real book, the real "The Name of the Rose", the key to the whole mystery.


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