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More details of book titled: The Enchantress of Florence: A Novel

The Enchantress of Florence: A Novel

Author: Salman Rushdie
Published: 2008-05-27
List price: $26.00
Our price: $17.16
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As of: November 21st, 2008 06:54:15 PM
Customer comments on this selection.

clog dancing India and Italy in the 16th Century
Finally a book from Salman Rushdie that I could read and enjoy! I had tried a couple of his earlier works including the 'Midnight's Children' but found them too confusing and complex.

This is a wonderful story based in 16th century India during the time of Akbar the Great, the most well known Mughal emperor. The visitor from Florence, Italy comes to the Mughal court with a secret to tell to the emperor and the story keeps the reader enthralled throughout. The contrasting lifestyles and philosophies of the western and eastern world is beautifully brought out by the author. Mr.Rushdie's in depth understanding of history, religion, culture and philosophy is obvious and his ability to mesh them all together to bring out a great book is outstanding. Every line contains so much information that I am astounded on how much research that must have gone into this book.

This one deserves many prizes!! (maybe a Nobel?)


clog dancing The Enchantress of Florence
I kept thinking I must be missing something. It was so hard to follow all of the differenct stories within the same book. I did't experience suspense, joy, or any of the other feelings descriped in the forward. I could not reccommend this book.

clog dancing Decameron & Arabian Tales rolled into one
Western tales with Eastern characters (Qara Köz - "Kara Göz" in Turkish spelling, "Lady Black Eyes") meet Eastern tales of Western characters (the yellow haired European traveller -- a la Marco Polo). The plot follows Silk Road, and sometimes goes as slow as a camel. The language is pretty impressive though.

If you liked Eco's The Island of the Day Before and Pamuk's My Name Is Red, you will also like this book.


clog dancing a little hard to follow, but beautiful poetic writing
To start with, I envy anyone who can put together words in such a beautiful way. But I had a pretty hard time following the story. I really didn't care, though, because the writing was so beautiful. If you're someone who has to understand what is going on in every aspect of the story, you might be frustrated reading this. If you can get over it and just enjoy the writing and the parts you understand, then it's definitely worth it. I loved the descriptions and the fable quality of the story.

clog dancing Couping a set of flippant short stories to a serious novel does not work
There is a volume of short stories scattered throughout this novel; and a shorter novel waiting to be released.

They clutter the main story line, and hide the deeper ideas that Rushdie is exploring of the role of religion, democracy and the value of benevolent dictatorship.

The short stories are a manufacture of fairy tails writ large, with all the exaggeration and flowery language of a persian fairy tale, and none of the economy or closure of the Scandinavian type. So in the end it is like watching antelope in the Serengeti from the window of a slow moving train. They numb the brain, one loses track of all the characters flitting in and out, but (worse still) midway through the book nothing seems grounded anymore and the words become a blur.

There is a lot of story woven into the histories of the Great Khan, Tamerlane, the Medici, Machiavelli, blah blah blah, it's all too much.

Running as twin interwoven threads, and in a far more accessible prose, are the story of the Enchantress, and the musing that Rushdie places into the mouths of his thought leaders, especially the Emperor and his musing on the dichotomy of his own immortality coupled to the Godhead he represents.

Halfway through the book I stopped with the fairy tales & historical trivia and addressed myself only to Rushdie's Purpose. Then I returned to the rest, which I was then able to lift out as a set of complete short stories that enlarged on and gave context to the Purpose. Without the distraction of the fluff, I was able to deal with the ideas. Without the ideas, I was able to enjoy the fairy tales and History lessons: all of which are well researched and well (though flippantly, almost charicature-isticaly) represented.


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