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The Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of…
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The Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of René Descartes (edizione 2017)

di Andrew Pessin (Autore)

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2191,056,567 (4)8
Who would want to murder the world's most famous philosopher? ​Turns out: nearly everyone.​In 1649, Descartes was invited by the Queen of Sweden to become her Court Philosopher. Though he was the world's leading philosopher, his life had by this point fallen apart. He was 53, penniless, living in exile in Amsterdam, alone. With much trepidation but not much choice, he arrived in Stockholm in mid-October.​Shortly thereafter he was dead.​Pneumonia, they said. But who could believe that? There were just too many persons of interest who wanted to see Descartes dead, and for too many reasons. That so many of these persons were in Stockholm--thanks to the Gala the Queen was throwing to celebrate the end of the terrible Thirty Years' War--made the official story all the less plausible. Death by poisoning was the unofficial word on the cobblestone.​Enter Adrien Baillet. A likeable misfit with a mysterious backstory, he arrives just as the French Ambassador desperately needs an impartial Frenchman to prove that Descartes died of natural causes--lest the "murder" in Lutheran Sweden of France's great Catholic philosopher trigger colicky French boy-King Louis XIV to reignite that awful War. Baillet hesitatingly agrees to investigate Descartes's death, knowing that if--or when--he screws up, he could be personally responsible for the War's Thirty-First Year. ​But solving the mystery of Descartes's death (Baillet soon learns) requires first solving the mystery of Descartes's life, with all its dangerous secrets ... None of it is easy, as nearly everyone is a suspect and no one can be trusted. Nor does it help that he must do it all under the menacing gaze of Carolus Zolindius, the terrifying Swedish Chancellor with the strangely intimidating limp.​But Baillet somehow perseveres, surprising everyone as he figures it all out--all the way to the explosive end.… (altro)
Utente:CDVicarage
Titolo:The Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of René Descartes
Autori:Andrew Pessin (Autore)
Info:Open Books (2017), 508 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca, Kerry's, Ebooks, In lettura, Da leggere, Gifts
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Etichette:Fiction, Early Review, ebook

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The Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of René Descartes di Andrew Pessin

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» Vedi le 8 citazioni

Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Who would want to kill DesCartes? Everyone who knows him. So, how to discover the killer. Now *there* is a story. And this is the story, nicely told. ( )
  Nightwing | Oct 13, 2022 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
*I received a free copy of this book from the publisher through LibraryThing’s Early Reviewers in exchange for an honest review.*

I wasn’t feeling the beginning of this–it’s incredibly slow and suffers from a lot of info dumping. I wasn’t really sure what the point of the book was for a good 50 pages of it. Also, the main character seemed too bumbling and clueless for me. I understand why he works for the story to be revealed the way it does, but I just wasn’t feeling it. There’s also way too many suspicious characters who seem super shady for me to have really gotten into the mystery part of it. The way I saw it, it didn’t really matter who killed Descartes since they all seemed pretty guilty.

However, once the story properly got started, I enjoyed myself. There are a lot of twists and reveals that the reader can guess at once more information is given near the middle of the book, and that’s where a lot of the action picks up. The intrigue itself is quite good and there’s quite a twist at the end.

However, the part that shone for me and that I really enjoyed was Rene Descartes’s backstory. Once Pessin goes into the history of France and the area, the context of the time Descartes lived in, and his experience at school, I was hooked. More than anything, this book made me want to pick up biographies of Rene Descartes just to learn more about him. I was a little disappointed to get back to the proper storyline, but that interest in Rene Descartes helped get me to the end, which was quite good.

Overall, Pessin does a good job in connecting true historical events and weaving an interesting tale around Descartes and his murder. While the thriller aspects seemed a bit off to me, I did enjoy the overall story.

Also posted on Purple People Readers. ( )
  sedelia | Feb 25, 2019 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Interesting blending of history, mystery and intrigue. Pessin has taken the real life debate as to whether Descartes died in 1950 of natural causes and turned it into a mystery novel, tasking the young and inexperienced Jesuit Adrien Baillet with investigating the circumstances surrounding Descartes untimely demise. The fact that the Swedish court's Chancellor expects Baillet's report to confirm natural causes is only one of many hurdles Baillet faces. The story is really two stories in one... the book alternates between following Baillet investigation and portraying Descartes life. The Descartes chapters make for good historical
reading but I have to say I really enjoyed the fast-paced, twisty plot of suspects and events of the Baillet chapters. Filled with everything from swordplay to secret societies and political /religious intrigue, this is quite the packed historical fiction read. Granted, the author has taken some literary license in giving his characters some more contemporary turn of phrase and mannerisms, but I found these helped enhance my reading pleasure and gave the story some entertaining moments, lightening the dark, sinister atmosphere of shadowy figures, long nights and freezing cold of Pessin's Stockholm.

Overall, an entertaining mystery thriller and an informative glimpse into the life of René Descartes. ( )
1 vota lkernagh | Oct 14, 2017 |
Historical fiction is unique in several ways. In particular, while all fiction -- at least good fiction -- requires imagination and intelligence, historical fiction, according to bestselling author Alexander Chee, deals with "the plausibly hypothetical" and describes "what might have happened within what happened." The constraints of real events, people and ways of life often mean, to paraphrase Longfellow, that when historical fiction is good, it's very good, but when it's bad it is horrid. Andrew Pessin's The Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of René Descartes clearly is in the former category.

Built around the Thirty Years War and its surrounding religious conflicts, the book is an intelligent and entertaining contemplation of some "what ifs" in Descartes' life. Pessin, a Connecticut College philosophy professor who's written or edited several books about philosophy, combines fact, speculation and imagination in crafting the two narratives that culminate in an adeptly crafted revelation. One follows Descartes' 1650 death in Sweden, where he moved the year before at the invitation of Christina, the queen of Sweden. The other starts with his birth in 1596 and brings the reader to the beginning of the first narrative.

With the latter, Pessin provides insight into the man rightfully recognized as a philosopher (often called the first modern rationalist) and mathematician (introducing Cartesian geometry, among other things) and scientist. By using and examining almost ordinary points in Descartes' life and his reclusiveness, The Irrationalist humanizes him. "He was," Pessin writes, "a man who could do a half-dozen calculations in his head simultaneously but he had not yet mastered how to navigate a world filled with actual human beings." The book also pursues the lingering conjecture that Descartes was associated with the Brothers of the Rosy Cross, a forerunner of today's Rosicrucians. The secret group sought to synthesize esoteric knowledge and symbols with science and math to gain a complete understanding of nature. Pessin also observes, though, that in those efforts "it was apparently also necessary to say some nasty things about the Pope and occasionally also Luther and Calvin."

The postmortem tale is a mystery (two, actually) coming on the heels of the Peace of Westphalia, which helped make Sweden a great power. It is told from the perspective of Adrien Baillet, the historical figure with whom Pessin takes the most liberty. The real Baillet was a French priest, scholar and librarian who wrote the first biography of Descartes. Here, he is a rather inept errand boy and assistant for the now-retired rector of the Jesuit college in France that Descartes attended years before. For some reason, Baillet, who is not a priest, is sent to Stockholm to represent the Jesuits at a gala being held by Queen Christina. Descartes dies the morning Baillet arrives.

History has it that Descartes died of pneumonia. More recently, there's been suggestions Descartes actually was assassinated. In The Irrationalist rumors to that effect surface immediately. The French ambassador to Sweden asks Baillet to investigate, even though he lacks any relevant experience. Baillet's pursuit of his unwelcome task ultimately provides two twists, one under the surface from the beginning and the other perhaps cognizable only to those with in-depth knowledge of Descartes' life.

The book is generally well-paced, although there are occasionally scenes that seem superfluous. The writing makes the book a pleasure to read and Passin avoids obvious anachronisms. The skilled research and writing, though, makes one gaffe almost painfully conspicuous. In the same sentence, Pessin writes that Baillet got a "vibe" from a window, producing a "creepy" feeling. The latter term didn't come into use for another 140 years while it would be more than 300 years before "vibe" gained the meaning for which it is used.

Regardless, the book is both strong and engaging. Pessin crafts time and place in a fashion that transports readers to and lets them become immersed in the story. His attention to detail in that regard and in drawing the characters -- not just Baillet and Descartes -- exhibits command of elements that create exceptional historical fiction. A reader leaves not only satisfied but understanding more about Descartes and his time.

(Originally posted at A Progressive on the Prairie.)
  PrairieProgressive | Aug 8, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A slightly odd book.

It opens with the lead character, Baillet, on his way to Stockholm to meet with Descartes. On arrival Baillet finds that Descartes has died, and perhaps not a natural death, and Baillet is shanghaied into investigating his death.

So far so good, a murder mystery set against the exotic half wild background of early modern Sweden. But no, the book swings between a simple murder investigation and long semi fictional biographical passages on Descartes life and ultimately why he ended up dead in house in Stockholm.

It does all hang together to make a quirky book - not quite a mystery and not quite historical fiction. There's a twist at the end of the story as well which you begin to realise in the last few pages. ( )
  moncur_d | Jul 29, 2017 |
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Who would want to murder the world's most famous philosopher? ​Turns out: nearly everyone.​In 1649, Descartes was invited by the Queen of Sweden to become her Court Philosopher. Though he was the world's leading philosopher, his life had by this point fallen apart. He was 53, penniless, living in exile in Amsterdam, alone. With much trepidation but not much choice, he arrived in Stockholm in mid-October.​Shortly thereafter he was dead.​Pneumonia, they said. But who could believe that? There were just too many persons of interest who wanted to see Descartes dead, and for too many reasons. That so many of these persons were in Stockholm--thanks to the Gala the Queen was throwing to celebrate the end of the terrible Thirty Years' War--made the official story all the less plausible. Death by poisoning was the unofficial word on the cobblestone.​Enter Adrien Baillet. A likeable misfit with a mysterious backstory, he arrives just as the French Ambassador desperately needs an impartial Frenchman to prove that Descartes died of natural causes--lest the "murder" in Lutheran Sweden of France's great Catholic philosopher trigger colicky French boy-King Louis XIV to reignite that awful War. Baillet hesitatingly agrees to investigate Descartes's death, knowing that if--or when--he screws up, he could be personally responsible for the War's Thirty-First Year. ​But solving the mystery of Descartes's death (Baillet soon learns) requires first solving the mystery of Descartes's life, with all its dangerous secrets ... None of it is easy, as nearly everyone is a suspect and no one can be trusted. Nor does it help that he must do it all under the menacing gaze of Carolus Zolindius, the terrifying Swedish Chancellor with the strangely intimidating limp.​But Baillet somehow perseveres, surprising everyone as he figures it all out--all the way to the explosive end.

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