Review by New York Times Review
WHEN I was first learning quantum mechanics, I would occasionally feel compelled to lodge a complaint on behalf of common sense. My physics teacher would fix me with his twinkling gaze and intone, "Truth is stranger than fiction." He was right, and not only about the behavior of elementary particles. Umberto Eco's latest fiction, "The Prague Cemetery," is choreographed by a truth that is itself so strange a novelist need hardly expand on it to produce a wondrous tale. Eco forthrightly explains that all his major characters but one are historical figures; but a reader unaware of how close to the truth Eco is hewing might be inclined to award him more points for inventiveness than he earns. This is not to say that Eco doesn't earn points for inventiveness, nor that a novel can't succeed on other grounds. It is just to say that sometimes truth is stranger than fiction. The truth that directs the plot of "The Prague Cemetery" concerns a famous fiction created in the late 19th century, a fiction plagiarized from earner fiction, including works by the French novelists Eugène Sue and Alexandre Dumas père. Despite such disreputable beginnings, this famous fiction went on to assume the imprimatur of a truth so galvanizing it played a role in some of the more momentous events of the last hundred years. Fiction and truth thus penetrate each other with a creative abandon suggestive of inspired pornography. What we have here is a situation ready-made for a novelist with a Borgesian fascination with reality's perverse permeability by falsehoods. What we have here, in other words, is that famous fiction known as "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion." The "Protocols" are a forgery represented as the genuine minutes from a secret meeting of Jewish leaders conspiring for world domination, motivated by an unnatural will to power and an unappeasable hatred of Gentiles. They are dangerously indefinite on specifics - dangerous because the vagueness allows a great range of events to be thereby "explained" - but in general, tendencies like secularism, internationalism, communism, universal suffrage and universal education are all presented as tools dreamed up by international Jewry to subvert the morals, politics and finances of the Gentile world and deliver it into Semitic clutches. The "Protocols" in their finished form were published in Russia at a time when Nicholas II had his hands full with assorted dissidents, and the dissemination of the forgery was meant to discredit any and all reformers. But the "Protocols" have had an active life far beyond imperial Russia. Henry Ford excerpted them in his Dearborn Independent newspaper, and had 500,000 copies printed between 1920 and 1922. Adolf Hitler, of course, gave the fiction a rave review, but then so had Kaiser Wilhelm II, who entertained dinner guests with readings from the "Protocols." And of course the "Protocols" continue to sell briskly as nonfiction in many Arab countries. The story of the "Protocols" is rendered even stranger by the labyrinthine history of plagiarisms and hoaxes that went into its making, and it is this astounding back story that Eco fictionalizes. One of the plagiarized sources is an 1864 French political pamphlet, satirizing Napoleon III, entitled "Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu." The author, Maurice Joly, who spent 15 months in jail for his efforts, attacks the legitimacy of the emperor by showing plotters in hell undermining a rightful regime. Roughly two-fifths of the "Protocols" so closely parrots Joly's wording that there is little doubt of the borrowing. Joly, in turn, had plagiarized a popular novel by Eugène Sue, "The Mysteries of a People," which presented the schemers as Jesuits. These sources are predated by a late-18thcentury best seller, "Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism," by the French cleric Augustin Barruel, who charged that behind the French Revolution lurked a conspiracy of Freemasons. Napoleonic imperialists, Jesuits, Freemasons: where are the nefarious Jews? It was Barruel who first introduced them into the mix, a few years after his antiMasonic book, when he received a letter from a retired army officer named J. B. Simonini warning of a "Judaic sect" that was the world's most formidable and demonic power. This irresistible Semitic gloss to the theory of a conspiracy behind all despised social trends was expanded upon by, among others, a novelist named Hermann Goedsche, who was also a Prussian agent provocateur specializing in the forging of documents to incriminate democratic leaders. Goedsche's 1868 novel "Biarritz" had a chapter called "In the Jewish Cemetery of Prague," which, detached from the novel, was widely circulated, especially after its translation into Russian, and became a source for the "Protocols." (The chief of the Russian secret service helped advance the fraud.) It is this farrago of fiction, plagiarism and hoax that "The Prague Cemetery" dramatizes. All the historical players in this deadly farce are portrayed, interacting with the novel's invented protagonist, Simone Simonini, a professional forger who is the grandson of the original letter writer. Simonini is like a Forrest Gump of evil, always present where the action is. Or, to change the metaphor, he is a conspiratorial cross-pollinating bee, all sting and no honey, spreading any lie that he can sell for hard cash. Simonini, cynic though he is, is not devoid of all genuine feeling: he genuinely hates Jews. The threatening bedtime stories his grandfather tells him feature a Jewish boogeyman, Mordechai, who will "drag me off to his infernal den, to feed me unleavened bread made with the blood of infant martyrs." Yet another formative fiction. A GREAT deal of the action of "The Prague Cemetery" consists of clandestine meetings where people lie to and blackmail one another, the shady dealings punctuated now and then by rants against a hated group, usually the Jews. A reader unaware of the underpinning in hard historical facts might begin to languish beneath the tedium of the scheming and ranting, though Eco has tried to relieve the monotony by superimposing a plot concerning his protagonist. Simonini suffers from a split personality and is writing his life story on the advice of a certain doctor he chanced to meet in a Parisian cafe. He thinks the man, either German or Austrian, is named Froïde. I had rather hoped that the inclusion of Freud, otherwise gratuitous, was Eco intimating the Nabokovian claim that psychoanalysis, too, is a species of hoax, but no such luck. Indeed, the plot concerning Simonini seemed flimsily unsatisfying compared with the fantastic plot handed over to Eco by the facts of history. Still, if the creation of Simone Simonini is meant to suggest that behind the credibility-straining history lurks a sick spirit compounded of equal parts self-serving cynicism and irrational malice, who can argue? And even if the best parts of "The Prague Cemetery" are those he did not invent, Eco is to be applauded for bringing this stranger-thanfiction truth vividly to life. Eco's anti-Semitic protagonist is like a Forrest Gump of evil, always present where the action is. Rebecca Newberger Goldstein is a novelist and philosopher. Her most recent book is "36 Arguments for the Existence of God : A Work of Fiction."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [November 20, 2011]
Review by Booklist Review
An amnesiac tries to figure out who he is by writing his thoughts in a diary and explaining who he hates. It is 1897 and he is Captain Simonini, an accomplished forger with a talent for espionage, and he hates nearly everyone: Germans, Italians, Freemasons, Jesuits, women, but especially Jews. But what has caused him to lose his memory? And who is Abbe Dalla Piccola, the clergyman (or false clergyman) who shares his living quarters and seems to know more about our Simonini than Simonini himself? Thus opens Eco's much-anticipated sixth novel, a whirlwind tour of conspiracy and political intrigue that places one cunning and deeply cynical man at the center of a century's worth of diabolical deeds the most terrible of which being the forgery of one of the foundational documents of modern anti-Semitism. In another novelist's hands, the intrigue, mystery, and historical detail might be enough, but this is Eco, after all. Readers able to navigate the author's tricks and traps will find that this dark tale is delightfully embellished with sophisticated and playful commentary on, among other things, Freud, metafiction, and the challenges of historiography. . HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: If sales of the original Italian edition are any indication, librarians should expect considerable reader interest here.--Driscoll, Brenda. Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Eco's latest takes as its focal point the creation of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the infamous and discredited document used by anti-Semites and conspiracy theorists everywhere as proof of a worldwide Jewish cabal. His fictional main character, Simone Simonini, is a spy, a forger, a murderer, and a misanthrope, whose deep hatred of the Jews (for starters) drives him to cobble together the Protocols from the actual texts of historical figures like Maurice Joly, Abbe Augustin Barruel, and Leo Taxil. Complicating matters is Simonini's gradual realization that he is suffering from a split personality, dividing his time between his conspiratorial acts as the self-anointed "Captain" Simonini and as a suspicious priest, Abbe Dalla Piccola. What follows is an overstuffed, intriguing, hilarious, and frustrating glimpse into the turbulent power struggles of late 19th-century Europe and the imagined path to one of the most notorious documents of the early 20th century. Readers of Eco's oeuvre will no doubt be familiar with, and most likely welcome as a challenge, the author's insistence on cluttering his narrative with what can only be characterized as intellectual braggadocio. Such extemporaneous information certainly adds to the sense of place and the awareness of being told a tale by a master, but the narrative gets lost in the details. While no one expects Dan Brown simplicity from Eco, his desire to impress-and demand so much of-his readers sometimes works against his best intentions. Illus. (Nov. 8) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In late 19th-century Paris, Captain Simonini suspects that he's sharing his apartment with a certain Abbe Dalla Piccola-or is the abbe merely an alter ego helping him recall a story he'd rather forget? As Simonini works through his past (pretty much Europe's as well) we learn of a childhood shaped by hatred-his grandfather of the Jews, his Carbonari father of the Jesuits-and of the notary who plundered the family fortune, compelling young Simonini to work in his office. Beating his employer at his own game, Simonini quickly enters a career of betraying various sides to various bidders and eventually crafts a tale about rabbis plotting in the Prague cemetery that foreshadows the Protocols of Zion. By telling the story of this behind-the-scenes opportunist, Eco shows how easily entrenched prejudice can be exploited, distracting from cold, hard truth. VERDICT This is fascinating stuff, but there's such a thick impasto of historic detail that we sometimes miss the chill revulsion such revelations should arouse; what makes Eco sparkle (see Foucault's Pendulum, for instance) is how he uses ideas, not facts. But the serious minded will of course want to read and debate. [See Prepub Alert, 5/9/11.]-Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana, 2005, etc.) doffs his scholarly gown and dons his trench coat for another bracing--and controversial--mystery. Semiotician, medievalist and linguist, Eco delights in secret codes, cabals and conspiracy theories. He's got a humdinger in this new high-level whodunit, which features a fictional fellow--Simone Simonini by name--who wanders, darkly, throughout a late-19th-century Europe packed with very real people. Simonini, 67 years old when we meet him in 1897, is detestable. He's a study in suburban prejudices, among them a virulent strain of anti-Semitism, though, to be fair, he's got something bad to say about just about everyone: The Jew, he grumbles, is "as vain as a Spaniard, ignorant as a Croat, greedy as a Levantine, ungrateful as a Maltese, insolent as a Gypsy, dirty as an Englishman, unctuous as a Kalmyk, imperious as a Prussian and as slanderous as anyone from Asti." Did he leave out the Germans? No, they smell bad owing to a surfeit of beer and pork sausage. No one evades Simonini's withering glare, but it's the Jews he's really after, working farragos and guiles to stir up hatred against him through manufactured events up to and including the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, that tract that gave the Nazis so much fuel for their fires. In an oddball but bravado performance, Eco makes Simonini--who doesn't like Freemasons or Jesuits either--many things: a forger, a master of disguise, a secret agent and double agent, a shadowy presence who's up to more than we'll ever know, and on top of all that quite a good cook--there are recipes for fine dishes tucked inside these pages, and recipes for bombs, too. Simonini also keeps good and interesting company, hanging out with Sigmund Freud here, crossing paths with Dumas and Garibaldi and Captain Dreyfus there, and otherwise enjoying the freedom of the continent, as if unstoppable and inevitable. What does it all add up to? An indictment of the old Europe, for one thing, and a perplexing, multilayered, attention-holding mystery. Expect it to find many readers.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.