The Botticelli Secret
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2013) |
Preceded by | Madonna of the Almonds |
---|---|
Followed by | Daughter of Sienna |
The Botticelli Secret is a 2010
La Primavera by Renaissance artist Sandro Botticelli
.
Plot summary
In
15th-century Italy, Luciana Vetra was young and beautiful, with long, golden hair. She was a full-time whore and a part-time model. When her best client asked her to pose as the goddess Flora
for a painting, Luciana complied until the artist abruptly sends her away without payment. Luciana angrily took the unfinished painting, but someone was ready to kill her and people she knows to get the painting back.
As friends and clients are murdered around her, Luciana turned to Guido della Torre, a novice at the monastery of Santa Croce. They fled together through the nine great cities of Renaissance Italy, trying to decode the painting's secrets before their enemies caught up with them.
Secret of La Primavera
Woven into the novel like a
Botticelli created—not just to be seen as individuals, but as whole too. Many Renaissance academics (including Professor Guidoni) share the same belief as Fiorato that there is a code in the painting, and its true meaning is revealed at the end of the novel - lifting a conspiracy that would last until the 19th century.[citation needed
]
La Primavera, and many editions published contain the painting's image to help the reader decipher the code
.
Reception
- Fiorato creates her own masterpiece set at the height of Medici power. Renaissance Italy comes alive in brilliant sights and sounds from marbled halls to filthy sewers. Luciana is irrepressible, unabashed, and an absolute hoot while Guido foils her nicely as the learned, noble Holmes to her Watson. Political intrigue is deftly woven throughout, allowing readers to try their best sleuthing. — Booklist[1]
Sales
Fiorato's novel has been an international best seller, published across the world.[2] Work has begun adapting it into an event TV drama with Amber Entertainment, to be shot on location around Italy.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Davis, Nina C. (February 15, 2010). "The Botticelli Secret". Booklist. Vol. 106, no. 12. p. 40.
- ^ Marina Fiorato: novelist who wrote in cafés earns £250,000 advance, UK, The Telegraph, May 16, 2010
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to The Botticelli Secret.