A return to Umberto Eco
The unwavering intensity of his writing, and of his commitment to seem to be chronicling something as opposed to be vainly conjecturing something, is what made his fiction worth committing to.…
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The unwavering intensity of his writing, and of his commitment to seem to be chronicling something as opposed to be vainly conjecturing something, is what made his fiction worth committing to.…
The following is an excerpt from The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco's debut novel from 1980. The story is set in an Italian monastery in 1327, and is an intellectually heady murder mystery doused i…