The Name of the Rose

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By Umberto Eco (2014)
In 1327, finding his sensitive mission at an Italian abbey further complicated by seven bizarre deaths, Brother William of Baskerville turns detective.

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Callum Reid
Callum Reid
4.3
This is a book that demands something of its reader and rewards that demand generously.

A novel that takes medieval scholarship seriously on its own terms — Eco does not condescend to the period or modernise it for accessibility. The detective structure is secondary to the intellectual substance, which will frustrate some readers and delight others. I am in the latter category. The monastery as a world is rendered with extraordinary material precision. The Latin passages are unapologetically untranslated.

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