The Prague Cemetery by Umberto Eco

I love reading Umberto Eco books. Actually, let’s clarify that statement. I love having read Umberto Eco books. The books themselves are, at times, a little difficult to get through. They are extremely dense and lyrical and definitely not books that you can easily skim through and understand what is going on. From the 1860s through the end of the century, Eco’s newest book, The Prague Cemetery, deals with the rise of the antisemitism from Herrmann Goedsche’ Biarritz through the Dreyfus Affair (with a large stop at The Protocols of the Elders of Zion). It’s an amazing story where only the main character (and possibly his grandfather) are fictional. Everyone else is a real person and actually did the actions Eco writes about. So, let’s check out the scourge of Judaism and the Freemasons (and the Catholic Church, depending on who’s paying).

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Empire by Steven Saylor

Empire by Steven Saylor is a sequel to Roma and picks up with the same family at the end of the reign of Augustus. Saylor mentions in the author’s note that this is one of the more documented times in ancient history. There is a substantial number of authors and historians at this time, so we have great records of all the major figures of the time, often from numerous sources. But, I think all the detail might have caused problems for Saylor.

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Conspirata by Robert Harris

Conspirata by Robert Harris (published in the UK as Lustrum) is the sequel to Imperium(review) and the middle book of Harris’ Cicero trilogy. Where Imperium covered the rise of Cicero, Conspirata shows his downfall. And as Cicero’s influence starts to wane, another’s starts to rise, Julius Caesar. Cicero finds himself on the wrong side of history not long after he is celebrated for saving the city.

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Imperium by Robert Harris

Imperium by Robert Harris (author of Pompeiiand The Ghost) is the first of Harris’ trilogy of Cicero. Cicero is an interesting, but occasionally overlooked historical figure. But what would you expect of someone who lived at the same time as Spartacus, Pompey, Crassus, Julius Caesar, Marc Antony and Augustus. Unlike most of the other famous people from this time frame, Cicero isn’t a military commander, he’s a lawyer and speechmaker. But what a speechmaker he is. Cicero is one of the few people who can control a country by the force of his words alone.

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The Eight by Katherine Neville

The Eight is wonderful mix of Dan Brown and Umberto Eco, except that it predates either or them. Katherine Neville’s first novel is a wonderful trip through the French Revolution and the modern day (well 1970s) Middle East using a backdrop of chess and oil.

The book has two linked stories, one in the 1970s and one in the 1790s. The 1970s plot follows computer expert Catherine (Cat) Velis as she slowly finds herself in ensnared in a plot to recover a mystical chess board(the Montglane Service which used to be owned by Charlemagne) before the other side can. But the plot makes you work to find out who is on which side of the board. Is Cat the Black Queen or a simple pawn (who can cross the chess board to become a Queen or be easily disposed of).

In the mid 1970s, Cat finds herself on the outs with her consulting company boss and gets shipped off to Algeria to help with some oil activities (the start of OPEC). On her last week in New York, Lily (a chess loving daughter of a family friend) brings Cat to a chess match between two Soviet players. One is an over the hill player and the other is a prodigy who hasn’t been seen in years. When the over the hill player turns up dead in the men’s room, Cat starts finding herself in the middle of a mystery surrounding some ancient chess pieces which might be for sale in Algeria.

Meanwhile in the 1790s, two orphans (Mireille and Valentine), who were raised in a convent, are cast out along with all the other nuns to hide the secret of the Montglane Service. The Montglane Service is a mystical and powerful chess set once owned by Charlemagne. As the nuns leave the convent, Mireille and Valentine find themselves in Paris during the middle of the French Revolution and the abbess heads to Russia to find her lifelong friend Catherine the Great. Mireille finds herself involved with Napoleon, Voltaire, Talleyrand, Robespierre and Leonhard Euler as she struggles to help hide the chess set and find out who is trying to gain the power of the Montglane Service for themselves. Mireille’s diary links the two stories as Cat finds herself on the same path that Mireille took 200 years previously.

You can tell this is the author’s first novel, as she tries too hard at times to make the chess analogies with the characters as the same time they are popping up in the plot. This story predates Indiana Jones, Dan Brown and The Name of the Rose and you can easily see how they would not exist without The Eight.

In 2008, Neville released a sequel The Fire which has a similar plot and style, but not nearly the positive reviews.