’An exuberant and discursive historical novel, crammed with fascinating detail,’ - Barry Forshaw, The Independent
’The athors inject every scene with life, colour, lies and wit,’ - Stuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday
’A literary page-turner which delivered what Eco could not: a genuinely new discovery which was guaranteed to set the cat among the Vatican pigeons,’ - The Herald
’A massive, elegant, baroque edifice. Superbly written and researched,’ - The Australian
11 September 1683, Rome. The citizens of the city wait anxiously for the outcome of the battle for Vienna as Ottoman forces lay siege to the defenders of Catholic Europe. Meanwhile, a suspected outbreak of plague causes a famous Roman tavern to be placed under quarantine. One of its detainees, the mysterious Atto Melani, a spy in the service of France, discovers a secret passage leading deep into the Roman underworld. A plot to assassinate the pope and plans to use the plague as a weapon of mass destruction in the battle between Islam and the West are discovered.
Meticulously researched and brilliantly conceived, Imprimatur contains startling revelations that have been concealed for centuries, drawing on original papers discovered in the Vatican archives. A thriller in the vein of Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose, this novel sheds new light on the power struggles of 17th-century Europe, the repercussions of which are still felt today. First published to great controversy in Italy in 2002, Imprimatur was boycotted by the Italian press and publishing world. Despite this, the novel has gained European bestseller status; it has been translated into 20 languages with editions published in 45 countries. Over 1 million copies have been sold to date.
Visit a fan website with more in-depth information about Imprimatur and other books in the series.
Rita Monaldi was born in 1966 and is an expert in the history of religions. Her husband Francesco Sorti was born in 1964 and has a background in musicology. Both Rita and Francesco have worked as journalists, but in recent years they have collaborated on several historical novels including Imprimatur and its sequels Secretum and Veritas. They live with their two young children in Vienna and Rome.
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The book is all that has been claimed as a thriller, a page-turner and an historical revelation. What I found missing was characterization, sometimes understandable in a detective story, where anyone may be 'guilty'. But Eco managed it. One needs people to sympathise with, and I found that missing. I also felt that sometimes the fictional presentation was spoiled by too much listing of detail. Nevertheless, I shall be looking out for the authors' other work to appear in English.
By the way, what an attractive website you have here! But I cannot find the rondeau promised by the book.
Brian Haylett
Sun Aug 10 17:03:06 2008 | Brian Haylett