Le nom de la rose

roman

510 pages

French language

Published May 25, 1982

ISBN:
978-2-246-24511-7
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4 stars (6 reviews)

Roman policier puisque la trame est une enquête menée durant sept jours, à l'intérieur d'un monastère, par Guillaume de Baskerville. Roman théologique en ce sens que toute l'argumentation recueillie par le jeune moine Adso relève des concepts aristotéliciens et thomistes. Roman historique car situé avec beaucoup d'érudition et de minutie en Italie en l'an 1327, à une époque troublée de complots et d'hérésies que fomentent les roitelets du Saint Empire et le pape d'Avignon. Mais plus que tout cela, en en conservant les charmes et l'agrément, un livre sur les livres tant la bibliothèque labyrinthique du monastère est le lieu d'où tout part et où tout revient. Elaborée comme une imaginaire fantaisie de Borges, l'intrigue savamment scandée au son trompeur des sept trompettes de l'Apocalypse est intelligemment menée par un Sherlock Holmes médiéval qui n'ignore rien de l'ésotérisme et du mysticisme. Un grand roman de 1980 dont l'exemplaire traduction préserve …

28 editions

Whoever the intended audience is, it isn't me.

2 stars

"It is no accident that the book starts out as a mystery (and continues to deceive the ingenuous reader until the end, so the ingenuous reader may not even realise that this is a mystery in which very little is discovered and the detective is defeated). I believe people like thrillers not because there are corpses or because there is a final celebratory triumph of order (intellectual, social, legal, and moral) over the disorder of evil. The fact is that the crime novel represents a kind of conjecture, pure and simple. But medical diagnosis, scientific research, metaphysical inquiry are also examples of conjecture. After all, the fundamental question of philosophy (like that of psychoanalysis) is the same as the question of the detective novel: who is guilty?" [page 564]

I don't disagree entirely with this take on the novel by its own author, but I find it troublesome that he …

Review of 'The Name of the Rose' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

It's a murder mystery set in a 14th century Italian monastery. It's Eco's thesis on symbols and faith. It drags at times, but the whole picture is such a well constructed story that gives you a great basis to appreciate Eco's later works (which are sometimes a response to this book's success).

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3 stars