A review by penguin_emperor_of_the_north
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

5.0

August 7, 2016
It's possible that I'm not smart enough to enjoy this story properly. Eco wove in enough historical and literary references that I did get that I'm reasonably certain there's plenty more that I didn't get.

But that's okay. I enjoyed it in spite of my . . . dimness.

Half the fun from this book is the back and forth between William and everyone else. Both relating to his investigation and the philosophical/theological debates. And how all the monks try to draw William into the latter to avoid the former.

And there are some darkly funny moments. Like William's constant exasperation with Adso. Or the cellarer's trial.
SpoilerHe confesses to heresy but is adamant that he didn't kill anyone in the monastery. The inquisitor decides to torture him anyway. To avoid that the cellarer confesses to all of the murders and gives over the top and petty reasons.
Or Salvatore's arrest. But that one gets unfunny fast.

But that ending. Gah, it's just so frustrating. Major spoilers:
SpoilerThe monastery and library burns down. The bad guy succeeds in his plot and dies triumphant. The inquisitor walks away free and burns three people including that poor girl. And to top it off, William dies of the Plague twenty some years later.
Way to punch me in the gut there, Eco.

Also, learned that Umberto Eco died February 19 of this year. There go my plans of flying to Milan and ambushing him to talk about this book. RIP

May 25, 2014
Wow. That was cool.

The Name of the Rose is a murder mystery set in a medieval Italian monastery against the backdrop of tensions between the Holy Roman Emperor and the Avignon papacy. Besides the murder investigation that drives most of the plot, there is plenty of discussion of philosophy and theology.

This novel's central mystery is engrossing, the philosophy and theology discussions are fascinating (though if you're not interested in those topics you'll likely be bewildered for pages at a time) and our heroes, William and Adso, are relatable to a reader and provide a window into medieval politics in Italy, the Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire.

I should note that there's a lot of untranslated Latin and German, I don't think it detracts to much from the story but it did leave me wondering what the characters were talking about at times. Also, some scenes just happen without a lot of build up (or any at all in one case) leaving me confused as to why it just happened. Eco does a good job of pulling everything together but some scenes left me confused for a while due to their abruptness.