It was a farce of a book that highlights Eco's fascination with the grotesque, something that I don't share with him and learned quite intimately from reading Baudolino.
Foucault's Pendulum, on the other hand, is a wonderful book. Sure, I couldn't stand the silly sentimental and maudlin parts about the little Italian town, but the rest of the story was absolutely brilliant.
Foucault's Pendulum, on the other hand, is a wonderful book. Sure, I couldn't stand the silly sentimental and maudlin parts about the little Italian town, but the rest of the story was absolutely brilliant.
I actually agree with you. It's not that the grotesque bothers me, because I do think it has its place, but I don't think that place is at the center of a novel. In the past, I've found myself desensitized and even bored relatively quickly; so yeah, I'll probably avoid Baudolino.
I cannot even copy his manner because the manner of his prose was the manner of his thinking and that was a dazzling succession of gaps; and you cannot ape a gap because you are bound to fill it in somehow or other -- and blot it out in the process. -- Nabokov
WANT.
16/11/2010 10:52:33 PM
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How long does it take for his books to be translated into English?
16/11/2010 10:54:10 PM
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From what I can figure out by glancing at the Italian cover description, it sounds awesome.
16/11/2010 11:10:02 PM
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That is what drew me in as well, besides it being a novel by Eco
16/11/2010 11:18:38 PM
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Hence the "not Eco".
16/11/2010 11:33:56 PM
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Re: Hence the "not Eco".
17/11/2010 01:06:58 AM
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But that's not to say there won't be more difficult Italian words he doesn't know.
17/11/2010 02:43:06 AM
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That's odd
17/11/2010 03:34:20 AM
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Re: But that's not to say there won't be more difficult Italian words he doesn't know.
17/11/2010 10:41:57 AM
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Eco in Italian IS very difficult if you're not fluent.
17/11/2010 03:09:52 PM
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True, but I'm much more familiar with the language than I think most here realize
17/11/2010 04:29:45 PM
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There's an interesting article in English on the book...
16/11/2010 11:11:49 PM
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I'm equally surprised you won't be reading it in the original
16/11/2010 11:17:47 PM
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Let me rephrase: I'm going to wait for a hardcover version in Italian or English.
17/11/2010 01:34:51 AM
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I guess it'll be English then
17/11/2010 01:36:45 AM
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I don't understand it. Are they cheap, poor or do they just not love books?
17/11/2010 05:05:08 AM
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Likely the first two
17/11/2010 04:32:23 PM
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VAT is fairly modest on books, actually.
17/11/2010 05:50:51 PM
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Interesting
17/11/2010 09:43:36 PM
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It sounds like the French, Spanish and Italians don't read but the Germans do.
18/11/2010 01:44:21 AM
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What are the American percentages, then?
18/11/2010 02:48:08 PM
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Yes, I don't think percentages are relevant. Gross statistics would matter much more.
18/11/2010 10:52:24 PM
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Oh, and the Spanish translation is already availabe, I see
16/11/2010 11:49:54 PM
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I prefer the original. Like the stairs better than the dark doorway. *NM*
17/11/2010 12:16:11 AM
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I much prefer the original.
17/11/2010 02:52:30 AM
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I wonder if it might be published as Prague Cemetery
17/11/2010 03:36:32 AM
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Why do you think that, out of curiosity?
17/11/2010 04:27:55 AM
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Just seems more compact
17/11/2010 04:32:40 AM
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Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooh
17/11/2010 01:04:32 AM
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That's the cover I was trying to recall!
17/11/2010 01:22:35 AM
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Re:
17/11/2010 02:43:12 AM
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Foucault's Pendulum
17/11/2010 03:33:09 AM
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I am one of those Baudolino haters out there.
17/11/2010 05:08:13 AM
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Re: I'll read Foucault's Pendulum, then.
17/11/2010 07:01:09 PM
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