Fülszöveg
"A gripping concocti^ of mystery, political intrigue, and adventure with generous doses of romance and comic relief . . . Mr. Eco is a master storyteller."
—The Bakimore Sun
J am, 5 believe, alone of all our race,
the only man in human memory to, have been
shipwrecked and cast up upon a deserted ship.
So begin the jouri;ials of Roberto della Griva, a seventeenth-century nobleman who finds himself on tjoard a mysterious ship anchored in the bay of a beautiful island he cannotVeach. The story of how he got there, and what he finds on board, are just a part of this exquisitely crafted novel that celebrates the romance, war, politics, philosophy, and science of the Baroque period in all its lush and colorful detail.
"As wonderfully exotic as only Eco can contrive, with his encyclopedic knowledge and his captivating storytelling'skills An astonishing intellectual journey"
—Son Francisco Chronicle
"A masterpiece intellectually stimulati-ng and dramatically intriguing"...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
"A gripping concocti^ of mystery, political intrigue, and adventure with generous doses of romance and comic relief . . . Mr. Eco is a master storyteller."
—The Bakimore Sun
J am, 5 believe, alone of all our race,
the only man in human memory to, have been
shipwrecked and cast up upon a deserted ship.
So begin the jouri;ials of Roberto della Griva, a seventeenth-century nobleman who finds himself on tjoard a mysterious ship anchored in the bay of a beautiful island he cannotVeach. The story of how he got there, and what he finds on board, are just a part of this exquisitely crafted novel that celebrates the romance, war, politics, philosophy, and science of the Baroque period in all its lush and colorful detail.
"As wonderfully exotic as only Eco can contrive, with his encyclopedic knowledge and his captivating storytelling'skills An astonishing intellectual journey"
—Son Francisco Chronicle
"A masterpiece intellectually stimulati-ng and dramatically intriguing"
—Chicago Tribune
"This is high art that has not forgotten its origins in the tale told around a campfire. . . . Eco gives us, as we rarely get it, the novel as comedy, as adventure tale, as romance, above all as ^^Ispring^ofJi^eas." - - —Newsday
Vissza