Foucault's Pendulum
NEW––BroDart Dust Jacket Cover
Author: Umberto Eco
A Helen And Kurt Wolff Book
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
©1988 Gruppo Editoriale Fabbri Bompiani/© Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
CAB Comment––Umberto Eco is one of those writers that once you start reading one of his novels you are quite certain the man must know everything about everything. When I read “Foucault’s Pendulum” I have to say I was a bit overwhelmed at first, but I was ultimately blown away, even if I’m not quite sure I grasped every detail of it. And this novel is packed with amazing detail. “Foucault’s Pendulum” is a vast, complex, and mind blowing mystery interwoven with some very intriguing history––all of which inspired great confidence in me while I was writing the historical section of my own macabre thriller “Puzzleman”. As with Clive Barker’s “Books Of Blood”, that bolstered my efforts to write dark, grisly fiction with deep-rooted motivation, Umberto Eco bolstered my confidence while incorporating the layers of religious world history that supports my “Puzzleman”. I will admit that Umberto Eco isn’t for everyone; he isn’t light, fluffy mindless entertainment––not by a long shot––but his writing has a definite “wow factor” and is worth the effort.
“Foucault's Pendulum”––Kirkus Reviews:
“A first-rate, highbrow mystery packed with wit, satire, and erudition. As he did in The Name of the Rose (1986), Eco begins here with a teasingly slow windup followed by a narrative that kicks into high gear about one-fifth of the way in. From the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiens, the museum of technology in Paris, Casaubon narrates the tale of how a literary gag got out of hand, leading to violence, murder, mayhem. Casaubon has written a thesis on the medieval Templars--a martial order of monks founded initially to protect Crusaders en route to Jerusalem, and eventually disbanded by Pope Clement. Templar legends--in varying degrees of silliness--have been cropping up ever since: the movement went underground; it was buried within the Rosicrucians; it all connects with Atlantis, Stonehenge, the pyramids, etc. Casaubon meets up with Belbo, an underpaid scholarly editor amused at the heaps of New Age submissions crossing his desk--much of it, inevitably, touching upon a secret history of the Templars. Belbo's boss--a wizened operator of literary scams--wants to cash in on some New Age trade and suggests that Casaubon and Belbo throw together a history of the occult. Joined by Diotallevi, an authority on cabalistic word permutation, and with the help of a word processor, the team undertakes construction of a bogus study of the occult, a random sorting of hermetic writings: ""The challenge isn't to find occult links between Debussy and the Templars. The problem is to find occult links between, for example, the cabal and the spark plugs of a car."" The result is a book uncovering the Plan, an underground movement operated by the Masters of the World. Too busy chortling over their PC, Casaubon, Belbo, and Diotallevi don't consider that even an outrageous theory can tread on dangerous ground--until Belbo disappears and Casaubon begins a serious search for the Masters. A rich, comic work moving between points of erudition and parody, captured here with a smooth translation from William Weaver.”
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