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Foucault's Pendulum por Umberto Eco
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Foucault's Pendulum

por Umberto Eco

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List Five Books Parlour Game : You're So Possessive 19millwheel, Hoje 12:16pmignore
1001 Books to read before you die : Best 1001 Authors Alphabetically 108hemlokgang, Ontem 7:44pmignore
Go Review That Book! : Game Thread 3 108Jenson_AKA_DL, Ontem 10:09amignore
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Hogwarts Express : If you like HP then you would like... 116lily2124, Setembro 16ignore
1001 Books to read before you die : Post with touchstone for all 1001? 16arukiyomi, Setembro 10ignore
The Green Dragon : Guilt about your TBR pile. 35Musereader, Setembro 9ignore
Book talk : What is the WORST book that youve ever red? 424desultory, Setembro 7ignore
20-Something LibraryThingers : What's your favorite book in your library? 87atlargeinthewrld, Setembro 3ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 2 August 2008 215collyer, Agosto 21ignore
Hardboiled / Noir Crime Fiction : Noir? 27yareader2, Agosto 18ignore
List Five Books Parlour Game : Time(pieces), Gentlemen, please 9CD1am, Agosto 3ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 26 July 2008 210ktleyed, Agosto 1ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 19 July 2008 216msf59, Julho 29ignore
Name that Book : Before the da vinci code there was this book..HELP 12mcclean_, Julho 22ignore
The Green Dragon : The Do Not Bother To Read Before You Die Thread 70theduckthief, Julho 8ignore
Books that made me think : Enigmatic novels 16PercySwift, Junho 29ignore
1001 Books to read before you die : The 1001 "I've Read That" chain game 300BKieras, Junho 16ignore
Book talk : Guess the Book Ver 2.0 308thorold, Junho 5ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 24 May 2008 200Joycepa, Junho 2ignore
Book talk : Desert Island Books 61usnmm2, Maio 24ignore
Awful Lit. : I Love You Guys! 68Kplatypus, Maio 17ignore
Book talk : Rushdie and Eco on the same stage! 12polutropos, Maio 15ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 29 March 2008 178mrspenny, Maio 11ignore
1001 Books to read before you die : Best of Different Genres 14swizzlestick, Abril 24ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 12 April 2008 177TerryWeyna, Abril 19ignore
Someone explain it to me... : The Historian 12jjwilson61, Abril 11ignore
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1001 Books to read before you die : What are you reading for March 2008 128odysseya, Março 31ignore
The Green Dragon : NOMINATIONS: 1001 Fantasy Books 195VictoriaPL, Março 25ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 8 March 2008 187Storeetllr, Março 16ignore
The Green Dragon : Tell us what you are reading now, Part IV 161littlebookworm, Março 12ignore
The Green Dragon : Most awesome stand alone Fantasy book you ever read? 38lexid523, Março 11ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 1 March 2008 180karogers, Março 9ignore
1001 Books to read before you die : What are you reading for February 2008 123Vonini, Março 5ignore
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 9 February 2008 148kmbooklover, Fevereiro 25ignore
Adormecido: Someone explain it to me... : Umberto Eco / The Name of the Rose 21SanctiSpiritus, Janeiro 27ignore
Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : NatureGeek's 50 (actually, I'd be happy with 25) 8NatureGeek, Janeiro 26ignore
Adormecido: What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 12 January 2008 172Cariola, Janeiro 18ignore
Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : Favorite Book Ever?? 60ChrisG, Janeiro 12ignore
Adormecido: FAQ : Reporting review flag misuse? 75readafew, Janeiro 9ignore
Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : CarlosMcRey's  32CarlosMcRey, Dezembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : amancine's 50 book challenge: I will try for 100 books 58amancine, Dezembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: 50 Book Challenge : aliciaaa1's 50 book challenge 10aliciaaa1, Dezembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: List Five Books Parlour Game : Auther, Subject, Title 9imager, Setembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: The Green Dragon : Island 19MrsLee, Setembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: Metafilter : Authors who've written books you love and books you loathe 16skyanth, Setembro 2007ignore
Adormecido: Read YA Lit : August--What are you reading? 66Jenson_AKA_DL, Agosto 2007ignore
Adormecido: Site talk : Contest: What does tagging do to knowledge? 170shadowtricker, Agosto 2007ignore
Adormecido: The Chapel of the Abyss : Peeve - or - an exorcism of the demon of analogy. 31benwaugh, Agosto 2007ignore
Adormecido: Books Compared : Dracula/The Woman in White 33margad, Julho 2007ignore
Adormecido: Desert Island Books : Top 10 Fiction Titles 13andyray, Julho 2007ignore
Adormecido: Metafilter : Smart books for smart kids? 12odiv, Junho 2007ignore
Adormecido: Lost In A Good Book : If you could..... 11lady_zoz, Maio 2007ignore
Adormecido: The Green Dragon : New book discussion? 56mrgrooism, Maio 2007ignore
Adormecido: The Name of Queen Baudolino's Pendulum of the Flame Before : Eco's Work 8DoctorRobert, Abril 2007ignore
Adormecido: Book talk : Richard & Judy and the word literary 26PossMan, Março 2007ignore
Adormecido: Readers Against Struggling Through Books We Hate : Which authors consistenly deliver boring books? 7Windy, Fevereiro 2007ignore
Adormecido: Political Conservatives : Quiet announcement . . . 16OldSarge, Fevereiro 2007ignore
Adormecido: Historical Mysteries : [The Name of the Rose] 25mbahawk, Setembro 2006ignore
50 Book Challenge : joycepa's reckless 80 in '08 222Joycepa, Hoje 6:09pm stop ignoring
Book talk : Guess The Book Mk 4 234Booksloth, Hoje 4:25pm stop ignoring
Awful Lit. : I can't believe I wasted my time on this... 443frdiamond, Hoje 6:16am stop ignoring
Art is Life : What are you currently reading? 230geneg, Ontem 10:30pm stop ignoring
1001 Books to read before you die : Which of the 1001 are you currently reading? 344hemlokgang, Setembro 26 stop ignoring
What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 30 August 2008 191cameling, Setembro 14 stop ignoring
The Green Dragon : I've lost the currently reading thread - so here's number errr lots 272Busifer, Setembro 4 stop ignoring
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What Are You Reading Now? : The Clunkers of 2007 222theduckthief, Agosto 20 stop ignoring
What Are You Reading Now? : Abandoned Books 335Cariola, Agosto 16 stop ignoring
1001 Books to read before you die : April 2008: What are you reading from the 1001 list 83strandbooks, Abril 28 stop ignoring
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The Green Dragon : Tell us what you are reading now, part III 394WillSteed, Fevereiro 14 stop ignoring
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Adormecido: Book talk : The Name of the Rose 8pw0327, Janeiro 5 stop ignoring
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Adormecido: What Are You Reading Now? : What You're Reading the Week of 28 July 2007 188lili12302002, Outubro 2007 stop ignoring
Adormecido: What Are You Reading Now? : Foucalt's Pendulum by Umberto Eco 11ashmodai, Janeiro 2007 stop ignoring

Excertos de mensagens

Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco Walking with Her Daughter by Jessica Barksdale Inclan Amanda's Wedding by Jenny Colgan The Widow's War by Sally Gunning This is Graceanne's Book by P.L. Whitney

... and thinking "wow - I LOVED both The Poisonwood Bible and Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency so I took a look at Foucault's Pendulum thinking it was in good company...and added it to my wish list. Nope, no guilt here!

Oh God, all of them? But in particular... The Poisonwood Bible by Barbra Kingsolver Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency because it was assigned to me a a Go Review that Book! book almost nine months ago and I just feel no desire to read it. ...

... reading temporarily. Funny, how Son of the Morning had this Knights of the Templar Da Vinci Code theme to it as does Foucault's Pendulum and Shadow of the Wind reminds me a bit of Foucault's Pendulum, probably mostly because of the setting primarily, but also that eerie supernatural ...

... of Lisbon Like Water for Chocolate A Prayer for Owen Meany London Fields The Book of Evidence Cat’s Eye Foucault’s Pendulum The Beautiful Room is Empty Wittgenstein’s Mistress The Satanic Verses The Swimming-Pool Library Oscar and Lucinda Libra The Play ...

TadAD in Book talk : Guess The Book Mk 4 (Ago 19, 2008, 9:59pm)

... Italian author I know that sounds like that would be Eco. I don't remember it from The Name of the Rose, so I'll guess Foucault's Pendulum, which I've never read.

... one it would be One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. If I could get two, the second book would be Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. My third one woule be Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon There is enough going on in these three books to re-read them many more ...

94. The Eight by Katherine Neville. Published the same year as Foucault's Pendulum, 1988, this is a very different book along the same lines--age-old secret of power--Da Vinci Code type stuff. Problem is that both Dan Brown and Umberto Eco are better writers. Good story but a style ...

... cough* Breaking Dawn (which I have decided that I liked) and Expect Resistance *cough*, I'm not yet finished with Foucault's Pendulum. Should be in a couple of days though. Next up after that, unless I get distracted again, is Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro.

... is the review of Krik? Krak!. reading fox, read Foucault's Pendulum. I always have trouble w/ Eco. For me, anything tagged "owned," "to be read"/"to be re-read" is fair game.

In the middle of: The Pinhoe Egg by Diana Wynne Jones Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco and The Fall by Albert Camus which for some odd reason I am having a hard time getting through and I'm not sure why.

No, but I loved Foucault's Pendulum and a must read, in my opinion, is The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana.

#117 Foucault's pendulum is brillinat, I have the name of the rose waiting for me on my tbr shelf! I love the mysteries of udolpho very much, despite the dodgy poetry! I'm currently reading brick lane which is wonderful in its balance of tragedy with comedy. Although I think it's all ...

Just began Foucault's Pendulum which is exciting because I've wanted to read this for forever.

... of being repetitive, Umberto Eco is one of my all-time favorite authors. His writing is so fascinating. I've read Foucault's Pendulum, The Name of the Rose, The Island of the Day Before, and The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana. Each of the books is complexly layered, ...

Umberto Eco is fantastic. If you're impressed by his research and knowledge now, M1001, wait till you've finished Foucault's Pendulum. His writing is difficult for me, but so so worth the effort. I'd also like to mention Ralph Ellison. Invisible Man is one of my favorite reads of 2007 ...

... amount of knowledge and research this guy had to have and do to create this novel. I have also heard great things about Foucault's Pendulum and it is coming up in my TBR list. Looking forward to it. -- M1001

Foucalt's pendulum I hated it so much I swore not to touch anythign else Eco ever wrote, but I'm interested by #36 which claims name of the rose wasn't so bad? Any other supporters for this view? Quicksilver I don't like historical fantasy /alternative history much anyway, and this ...

... Novels, (one of the short novels is Three O'Clock), by Cornell Woolrich The Sundial, by Shirley Jackson Foucault's Pendulum, by Unberto Eco The Hour Glass, by William Butler Yeats

... Vinci Code which has neither the sheer gonzo outrageousness of The Illuminatus! Trilogy or the detailed scholarship of Foucault's Pendulum. (Or at least so I've gathered from the movie.) And to be fair, I'd probably add a genre that I have a particular weakness for: 80 - 90% of Cthulhu M ...

I loved The Name of the Rose in book and movie form, but Foucault's Pendulum and The Island of the Day Before are dreck. Actually, I've never even finished The Island - it just gradually filtered out of my reading pile.

Focault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco

... before Eco's. I've been trying to figure out (without putting any effort into it!) whether or not he was the first with Foucault's Pendulum. The one book of his I never was able to get through was The Island of the Day Before. I could not make sense of that book, but that was when it ...

... the Eco I've read, I feel like I've never stopped being intimidated when I approach one of his books. My first read was Foucault's Pendulum in college, which I read because someone told me it was like a more cerebral version of The Illuminatus! Trilogy. Which now that I think of it is ...

Well, that does it. I've got to read Foucault's Pendulum now! :) I remember very much liking The Name of the Rose when I read it 20 some years ago, so perhaps I'll be able to handle this one.

Linda, I most certainly think that he can be intimidating if you let him. I had forgotten how complex Foucault's Pendulum is. Just don't let the complexity blow you away--relax and enjoy it! He published the book in 1988. A computer is actually a main player, but as he says in the story, ...

... real. However, even though this is one of the best in the series, it's not good enough to justify my buying more. 70. Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. This is a reread for me, but nearly 20 years have elapsed between the first reading and now. I had forgotten entire sections of ...

... a gap in my knowledge I want to fill. The book was so good that, rather than start a new book, I've picked up Foucault's Pendulum and am rereading it. I LOVE Eco--one of the great modern writers.

... of the Rose isn't an easy book to read - it's pretty dense, and Eco does ramble sometimes. I thought it was easier than Foucault's Pendulum, though.

#47 mrsradcliffe; Foucalt's Pendulum will be a reread for me; I read it when it came out many, many years ago. What I remember is that at the end, I felt as if I needed to reread it to understand completely what had gone on and to fully appreciate the intricacies of the plot. Seems to me ...

... them - I found myself totally transported to Botswana, they are such a pleasure to read. #47 Let me know how you like Foucault's pendulum - I thought it was well written but a bit mystical for my tastes. I'm supposed to be reading all this stuff about semiotics for my course, but have ...

Foucault's Pendulum?

... have been doing is slowly, slowly replacing old favorites that somehow disappeared from my bookshelves. Just got a copy of Foucault's Pendulum; now I've got to get at least The Periodic Table on that particular Wish List.

... read from his new novel, The Enchantress of Florence and Eco, looking very absent-minded brilliant professor, read from Foucault's Pendulum. The readings were followed by a discussion moderated by a University of Rochester author. They covered topics such as their research methods for ...

... the same goes for my botany text book. Plus, between the two, I might get help identifying things that could kill me! Foucault's Pendulum-or anything else by Umberto Eco-again, the issolation should allow me to finally concentrate on each part of it properly. Doubt: A history The ...

... was a whiff of badness that even 10 pages could detect. If you like the subject matter you might read Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum. It is not as easy to read as his The Name of the Rose but entertaining. It starts with a murder in a cathedral. He has a much better grasp of history, ...

Kplatypus in Awful Lit. : I Love You Guys! (Abr 21, 2008, 12:22am)

... realised that I never finished my plea for Eco. I agree with a lot of Kaelirenee's comments on The Name of the Rose and Foucalt's Pendulum. They're Eco's best books, in my opinion, but can be tricky if you don't have a lot of background in the fields being discussed. One thing I used from ...

I have a few titles for you to try. The Mystic Rose By Stephen R. Lawhead. Foucalt's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. Treasure of the Templars by Tim Champlin Brotherhood of the Tomb by Daniel Easterman If you remember anything about the searchers being vampires, look into David N ...

#77 Good move, seanie, you won't regret it. I've finally finished Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco, which has taken me a couple of months, and have moved onto Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children as my selection from 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die, which looks like its ...

I plan to start reading Foucault's Pendulum tomorrow.

... weekend. He really is a dirty old man, but his writing lets him get away with it. I really ought to crack on and finish Foucault's Pendulum. I'm less than 100 pages from the end, but it has taken me 6 weeks to get there. My new audiobook is Tony Hawks' One Hit Wonderland, read by the ...

The ends of both Cloud Atlas and Foucault's Pendulum are in sight. Not sure what I'll read next.

The Meaning of Night: A Confession by Michael Cox Focault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco The Secret of Lost Things by Sheridan Hay A Great and Terrible Beauty (youth fic) by Libba Bray Ophelia (youth fic) by Lisa Klein The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney Lies Young Women Believe ...

... and that was interesting... I read Name of the Rose years ago and enjoyed it.. might have to hunt down a copy of Foucault's Pendulum...

Like fyrefly (#48), I've been struggling with Umberto Eco, and today I (finally!) finished Foucault's Pendulum. Time for some lighter reading; I'm starting Dune (and can't believe that I've never read it before now...) edited to close a tag

kaelirenee in Awful Lit. : I Love You Guys! (Mar 27, 2008, 10:00am)

... finished it before she even had a chance to hunt down the Cliffs Notes. Watching the movie first helped. I had to revisit Focault's Pendulum a few times before I could make it past the first three chapters. I just had to let my mind swim. I haven't been brave enough to try his other works, ...

I've read Cry, the Beloved Country - fantastic book. I'm currently working on Foucault's Pendulum.

I got virtually no leisure reading done over the weekend, and as a result, I'm still only about 1/3 into Foucault's Pendulum. Great book so far, I just haven't had the time to really delve into it again since early last week. *sigh* This weekend, maybe.

I'm about 2/3 of the way through Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco and have a couple of stories left in Haruki Murakami's The Elephant Vanishes. I listen to unabridged audiobooks and have reached disc 10 of 18 in David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas The smallest room has Charlie Brooker ...

... clue van het mystery te weten, maar ik zal het boek niet snel weer oppakken. Niet uitgelezen... o.a. Nevelen van Avalon, Foucault's pendulum, Dante club en Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell

Oooo. Watership Down, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, Foucault's Pendulum. I'll have to go poke around in the basement to see what else is stand-alone...

I finished Vladimir Nabokov's The Eye, and while it's bouncing around in my head, I think I've decided on Foucault's Pendulum for my next read.

Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco The Elephant Vanishes by Haruki Murakami Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

I have 3 books from the 1,001 list on the go at the moment. I'm just over halfway through Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum, my audiobook is David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas and, I've started reading the copy of Henry James's The Turn of the Screw I acquired whilst in Rome. My short ...

I'm ploughing on with Foucault's Pendulum, which I'm just over half way through. I also picked up The Turn of the Screw while on holiday and, after loathing pretty much everything I've previously read by Henry James, am finding this reasonably tolerable. Now I'm back at work, I'm ...

... see why some don't. I recently gave up on Baudolino as I just couldn't get into this monk's story, despite my love of Foucault's pendulum I also gave up some months ago on another Eco novel about a man who's memory goes but he can still remember all the books he'd read. I've given up on ...

After six months of not riding anything from the list, I recently read Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. It really took some time for me to really get into the flow of the book. This brings my whopping total to 37 books out of the 1001. 38 if I count On the Road by Jack Kerouac ...

I'm also indulging in something Italian, Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. I'm also continuing with The Elephant Vanishes and Screen Burn and will probably finish my audiobook ofThe Road on my way home from the office this evening.

Book 132 from the list for me, started last night, is Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. Eco's erudition can be a little bit daunting, but once you realise that you don't need to understand absolutely everything he writes when he's doing his academic clever clogs showing off thing, his ...

... Italian. All these are currently on my bookshelves: If On A Winter's Night A Traveller by Italo Calvino Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco The Leopard by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa

... with a mysterious, enigmatic quality such as The Magus by John Fowles, The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brian, Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco or Ocean Sea by Alessandro Baricco. Does anyone have any recommendations with a similar style? Damian

... Inc., J. Henry Waugh, Prop. by Robert Coover Khaled by Marion F. Crawford Geek Love by Katherine Dunn Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco The Circus of Dr. Lao by Charles G. Finney Coraline by Neil Gaiman A Secret History by Mary Gentle (first in the ...

... step to reading it - ha), and I also found another book I started but didn't finish last year that I'd like to finish: Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. And a couple other books I meant to read while we were traveling in Baja - The Log from the Sea of Cortez by John Steinbeck and Mexic ...

... Baudolino by Umberto Eco. It's quite a departure from the others of his I've read (The Name of the Rose and Foucault's Pendulum). It's a much simpler read, though I'm not sure if that's the way the book was written, or just the translation. Unfortunately it's not as gripping as ...

>58 Scarily enough I 'got around' to reading Foucault's Pendulum by lugging it up Kilimanjaro with me and reading it by head torch every evening. Reading through this thread makes me feel guilty - I am utterly daunted by all the Big Russians, occasionally I feel I ought to but I don't really ...

... non-fiction reader, but I get the impression you are probably asking for fiction books, in which case my favorite would be Foucault's Pendulum, by Umberto Eco.

pw0327 in Book talk : The Name of the Rose (Jan 3, 2008, 11:17am)

... Rose since I saw the movie before I was able to get to the book, I will get to it one day. But, I thoroughly enjoyed Eco's Foucault's Pendulum quite a bit. It is everything that DaVinci Code was not, intellectual, whimsical, fanciful, suspenseful, and full of historical facts woven nicely into ...

My big clunker of the year was Foucault's Pendulum I slogged through this book and can't believe I actually kept with it, since it was torture to get through! Considering the subject matter, I had such high hopes and found it so dull and wordy!

#10 jbd1: Foucault's Pendulum is one of my favorite books--not an easy read, I found, but fascinating.

Haven't gotten too much reading done this week, what with the holidays and all ... but will probably finish Foucault's Pendulum on the train ride back to Boston tonight. That may well be the last book I finish in 2007. Earlier this week I did read Lyra's Oxford, a Philip Pullman short ...

#13 Talbin - right? I couldn't have been more excited to read the thing too. *Sigh* Eco is really touch and go for me. Foucault's Pendulum didn't thrill me, but at least I could digest it at a clip. Island of the Day Before however I thought was an outstanding bit of imagination, taking ...

... watching the onboard movies instead - I found it to be extraordinarily boring. I had enjoyed The Name of the Rose and Foucault's Pendulum back when I was in graduate school, so perhaps you need to be in an academic state of mind to really get into Eco.

... Reynolds The Three Muskateers by Alexandre Dumas Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad Not a bad haul for under $20. Also, although I didn't realize it at the time, when I ...

... and their relationships were well crafted. I thought the scholarship was pretty interesting, though perhaps not quite Foucault's Pendulum-level. I liked the nested narratives, which helped to heighten the sense of mystery. And I actually thought there was an interesting concept there in ...

My favourites are Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco, which is like a thinking person's DaVinci Code. It is a fiercely intellingent mystery filled with ambiguity rather than the neat endings that make books like DaVinci Code as stimulating as a hollywood movie. Kafka on the Shore by Har ...

... In terms of international thriller with occult/esoteric elements, I'd say it lies somewhere between The da Vinci code and Foucault's Pendulum. (Personal opinion may determine which represent the lower and upper ends of that spectrum.) Could have used a little more Dracula. He started out as ...

I just noticed Foucault's Pendulum received a whole bunch of flags for one-line reviews. Maybe we can write in the little dialogue box that pops up when a flag is clicked that the length of the review doesn't dictate whether it is or not a review, as long as it makes sense?

... it's Bleak House or David Copperfield. 2. Mystery: I don't know whether it's technically a mystery, but I loved Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. 3. Comedy: Tristram Shandy 4. Horror: In Cold Blood by Truman Capote 5. Science Fiction: 2001: A Space Odyssey ...

I just finished Foucault's Pendulum and Tolkein's Finn and Hengest lectures and I am battling through good ol' Paradise Lost and skimming death du jour but I am at a bit of a loss as to what to read next. I should pick up something academic and challenging and something fantasy and fast. T ...

Arctic-Stranger in The Green Dragon : Island (Ago 29, 2007, 3:57pm)

... Zen Bones The Bible The Brothers Karamozov That Hideous Strength or Perelandra Delta of Venus Foucault's Pendulum On the Road Leaves of Grass Waiting for Godet

I'm reading Only Revolutions by Mark Z. Danielewski, A Wild Sheep Chase by Haruki Murakami, and Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. I might have to give up on Foucault's Pendulum, though-- it's getting a bit too tedious! Next on the list: The Hollow Kingdom, for next month's ...

I find it interesting what qualifies a book as the 'worst' by different posters. For me, Foucault's pendulum (read it completely) which I thought might be good since I liked the movie Name of the Rose. The violence of American psycho just from flipping though it in the bookstore made me ...

#156: Unfortunately there is no equivalent guide to Foucault's Pendulum that I am aware of but you might find some simple infobaun research on the Illuminati helpful in adding depth of understanding to Pendulum.

tagmash: tagging,knowledge one hit: Foucault's pendulum by Umberto Eco

153> Do you (or any other helpful LTers!) know if there's a similar key for Foucault's Pendulum? I started reading it last year (when I was ill, possibly not terribly good timing!) and just got bogged down. I wonder if having some of the allusions spelt out might help!