The Name of the Rose

by Umberto Eco
The Name of the Rose  
published 1980 by Harcourt
binding Paperback
isbn 0-15-144647-4  
description Novel by Umberto Eco, published in Italian as Il nome della rosa in 1980. Although the work stands on its own as a murder mystery, it is more a...more
date added
05-17-07



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Jason Pettus
03/11/08

Read in March, 2008
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)

The CCLaP 100: In which I read a hundred so-called "classics" and then write reports on whether or not I think they deserve the label
Book #7: The Name of the Rose, by Umberto Eco

The story in a nutshell:
In one of the more fascinating stories of how a novelist was fir...more
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Tim
04/20/08

Read in December, 1985
If I had to spend a year on a desert island and was only allowed to take one book, this would be it.

At the time of its publication, one reviewer described `The Name of the Rose' as "a book about everything". At first glance, it may seem to be a book largely about obscure Fourteenth Century religious controversies, heresies and sects, with a murder mystery mixed in. But this is a book that rewards repeat readings (I've just finished it for the seventh time), and the heart of the no...more
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Silvana
bookshelves: classics, own
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: everyone
What a mesmerizing (yet sometimes confusing) book. Five hundred pages, not including the introduction and post-script.

It is basically consisted of two main plots. First was the mysterious murders of monks in an Italian Franciscan abbey on the 14th century, in which a former Inquisitor named William of Baskerville and his novice turned detectives to solve the murders. Second was the so-called historic meeting between Franciscan leaders (favored by the Roman Emperor) and their archenemy, represe...more
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Nicholas
bookshelves: consumed
Read in July, 2008
Since Eco, a semiotician, is a fan of lists, and I would butcher a review or have to spend 10 hours to complete a few paragraphs satisfactorily, I'm going to leave myself a list of thoughts.
-Plunged into an agitated state of despair after finishing this. If because I was released from the feverish grip it was holding me in, or because I grieved for the library and the loss of precious knowledge, or because returning my senses to the modern day was revolting, experiencing layer upon layer of m...more
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Alana
09/08/07

bookshelves: fiction, historical
Read in August, 2007
This is another of those frame story upon frame story novels. 'The author' writes that he found and translated a book that claimed to be an accurate reproduction of the original manuscript of a medieval monk Adso of Melk.
The manuscript itself was written in the monk's old age but detailed his experiences with sin, heresy, and murder in a certain monastery in his youth.

As a young novice, Adso accompanied Franciscan William of Baskerville, renowned for his deductive and reasoning powers, t...more
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Laura
06/13/08

bookshelves: to-read-again
Read in June, 2008
This is one of the rare mystery novels out there that manages to be more than just a "whodunit." Mysteries, which come with the ready-made plot arc of crime/investigation/solution, often fail to give the reader much more than that, dressed up with a few different characters or a different setting. In Eco's book we get not only a decently plotted murder mystery , but also a close look at life in a medieval European abbey, plus an examination of the nature of books, of knowledge, of lan...more
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Peter
Peter rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/28/08

bookshelves: literature
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: Dan Brown fans, to highlight Brown's inadequacies
The Name of the Rose is part medieval whodunnit, part exposition on the medieval world and part treatise on semiotics. It is the work of a great wordsmith who ingeniously draws us, like young novice monk and narrator Adso, and ertswhile syllogician William of Baskerville, into the language of signs. A murderer is afoot and the contemplative, reverential tranquility of this monastery - famed home of the greatest library in the Christian world - is being threatened. The library itself takes the ...more
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Adriana
Read in June, 2007
I had wanted to read The Name of the Rose for a long time, mostly because I enjoy both fiction and non-fiction about the Middle Ages, and also because of its importance as a piece of modern Italian literature. Although I liked it for the most part, I have to admit that it disappointed me in many ways. As a mystery novel, I was expecting it to be a fast-paced page-turner, whereas in reality The Name of the Rose is very slow and ponderous. I appreciate the attention to detail and the minute and...more
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Micah
10/09/07

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: Medieval buffs, and mystery fans who dig theology (can anyone say niche?)
If you are fascinated by the medieval period, like mysteries, occasionally get into absurd arguments with Catholics about their insane theology (is it bad form to be offensive on goodreads? Let’s find out), this may be the book for you.
Wrapped in a who-done-it murder mystery, Eco explores the minds, and attitudes of the intelligentsia of the early 14th century: i.e. freakin’ monks. The main character is Sherlock—I mean William of Baskerville, a brilliant master of deductive reasoning,...more
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chakameh
bookshelves: fiction, history
Read in January, 2008
I got the book based on the many recommendations I’ve heard from the book. Especially because I’ve heard the story is happening inside the Abbey of Melk. When I was living in Austria I visited this magnificent building and was very interested to read the book.
An interesting prologue from the author made me even more eager to start the story.
Then the story has begun gradually with narration from a novice, now very old, who was telling his memoirs of his early days when he accompanied a ...more
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Ole
09/03/07

Has a copy to sell/swap
recommends it for: anyone who enjoys "the chase"
After a steep and slow hundred-page-or-so "initiation" into a richly imagined medieval abbey, Eco plunges the reader into an abyss of breathtaking intrigue. William of Baskerville, a relentlessly careful thinker in the tradition of the Franciscan
monk and natural philosopher Roger Bacon, arrives at the Italian monastery to lend support to a desperate mission to bring the haughty delegates of the tyrranical Pope to an understanding and acceptance of the Franciscan movement's embrace ...more
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Meika
08/28/07

Read in October, 2003
recommends it for: librarians
The key to a series of brutal murders at a Benedictine monastery is locked in a library.
The library itself is a physical labyrinth and a labyrinth or riddles. There are scripts written into the arches where collections are kept, and the cataloging system is designed to hide knowledge from unworthy seekers. The librarian, who holds the physical and mental keys to the collection, is both a minister and a gatekeeper.

What plays out in the story is a debate about whether or not humor, lau...more
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Rob
02/05/08

Read in January, 2008
This was an interesting book, though I didn't enjoy it quite as much as I was expecting to, and I'm not entirely sure why.
It's a medieval murder mystery that takes place in a monastery. Written in the first person, Eco does a masterful job of writing just as a 14th century monk novice would probably have written. This makes for very educated and original reading (the book is full of historical assessments and theological monologues), but also means there is a lot of listing, attention to d...more
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Ali
05/01/08

bookshelves: novels
A journey to an abbey where a murder has been committed, and then several other people die, mysteriously. But I didn’t find the novel a detective fiction as I’d been told. I’d been told also to be carefull to not get involved very much with the criminal dimension of the novel. This is sufisticated exposition of the power of laughter, logic, texts, … facing with the the Inquisition! Not very much about Catholisism, but about orthodoxy in any idea or theory all over the history. I could al...more
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Noel
12/07/07

Read in December, 2007
I came to this book completely unaware that there was a movie based on the thing, which a few of my friends suggested I watch before continuing on with my endeavor of plowing through this dense, Latin laden prose. Normally, I would scoff at such an idea but in this case, it might be help. Umberto Eco seems to delight in side stories dealing with the science and dogmatic issues of fourteenth century Europe, which are interesting in and of themselves, but kind of left me groping for the narrativ...more
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Bunxena Rabbit-Princess
bookshelves: book-sale-, top-100-crime-novels
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Bunxena by: Top 100 list, my friend JNY
recommends it for: people who enjoy richly descriptive works, historical novel fans (13th cen)
Thank God that that book is finally over with. Took me over a month to read, which is a long time for me. It's a book that unfolds at a measured pace, packed with lush descriptions and extended conversations between the characters. I guess since there was nothing else to do in the 13th century, people talked FOREVER.

Now, Umberto Eco is a fabulously descriptive writer. However, not everyone can stomach such a level of description. I will readily admit to having a lowered tolerance for descrip...more
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Annis
07/13/07

Read in July, 1993
I remember reading tis book like it was yesterday. I had the luxury of lying on a raft in a pool for nearly a week just before I started my second year of teaching high school English and wanted to read something that wasn't for school. Easily one of the best books I've ever read. I tried to read some of Umberto Eco's more literary criticism-oriented stuff (Foucault's Pendulum) in college and almost suffocated. I'm glad I didn't hold it against him and went ahead and picked this up anyway. It's...more
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Erika
07/05/07

I became addicted to this book like crackmonasticicane. What I mean is, large chunks of medieval Papist theology notwithstanding, this book was responsible for a renewed passion for long novels.

I picked up this book for a medium lame reason - it is THE ECO, MASTER OF SEMIOTICS. Plus I wanted to impress my old professors. Just kidding. Sort of.

One frustrating aspect about this book is the translation from the Italian, although I believe I read the definitive English edition. Clauses lik...more
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Eve
08/05/07

bookshelves: