The Enchantress of Florence: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Genius Bonus]]: Inevitably, the historical in-jokes.
* [[Genius Bonus]]: Inevitably, the historical in-jokes.
* [[Go Mad From the Revelation]]: Il Machia met a slave-girl which was transformed by potent hypnosis to be a "memory palace", a kind of exotic hard disk drive. He then attempted to restore the girl to a human state, but when she did, she remembered all the perils of her life and defenestrated herself.
* [[Go Mad From the Revelation]]: Il Machia met a slave-girl which was transformed by potent hypnosis to be a "memory palace", a kind of exotic hard disk drive. He then attempted to restore the girl to a human state, but when she did, she remembered all the perils of her life and defenestrated herself.
* [[High Class Call Girl]]: Alessandra Fiorentina and her minions.
* [[High-Class Call Girl]]: Alessandra Fiorentina and her minions.
* [[I Have Many Names]]: The main character.
* [[I Have Many Names]]: The main character.
* [[Impaled with Extreme Prejudice]]: Countless of [[Dracula|Vlad Dracula]]'s victims, as per history. Also, {{spoiler|Simonetta}}.
* [[Impaled with Extreme Prejudice]]: Countless of [[Dracula|Vlad Dracula]]'s victims, as per history. Also, {{spoiler|Simonetta}}.

Revision as of 07:38, 5 October 2014

"In the beginning, there were three friends, Niccolò 'il Machia', Agostino Vespucci, and Antonino Argalia."

The Enchantress of Florence (2008) is the ninth novel of Salman Rushdie, which unapologetically mixes historical facts and fantastical elements without shame or mercy. It is mostly seen as a work of Magic Realism, but with quite a dose of fantasy element. Rushdie is particularly proud of the research he's done for the novel's writing, and proudly attached half a dozen pages of references at the end of the book—not bad for a work of fiction.

At the heights of the Mughal Empire of India, a blond traveller with a strange overcoat and, seemingly, magical prowess, came to visit Akbar the Great with a secret only a king may hear. He claimed to be under the protection of the greatest enchantress in the world: the titular enchantres of Florence. Strange things happened along the way.


The Echantress of Florence provides examples of:

  • Art Initiates Life: Jodha, the Emperor's favourite queen, was apparently conjured up by him by sheer force of will. This is among the few moments in the story which is hard to interpret in non-magical terms.
    • Inverted Trope: Dashwant, the imperial artist, fell so madly in love with Qara Köz that he managed to transform himself into a painting.
  • Badass Boast: Akbar does this daily. The Scottish milord had one, too.
  • Bag of Holding: The traveller's coat.
  • Big Beautiful Woman: A prostitute in a whorehouse in Sikri, nicknamed "the Matress". People usually hire her along with her counterpart, the Skeleton, "to explore the extremes."
  • Blasphemous Boast: Possibly. The book noted that when he says "Allahu Akbar" (God is great/akbar) he could very well mean "Akbar is God."
  • Cluster F-Bomb: Ago Vespucci, to the point that many people assigned this to him as his defining characteristic.
  • Cuckold: Everyone loves Marco Vespucci's wife, although it's unclear whether they ever bedded her. Being a nice, stupid lad that he was, Marco said such a beauty should be public property.
    • Subverted by Praise-God Hawkins, which had departed so long from his beloved that he imagined daily that she had gone for another man back home.
  • Dying as Yourself: Simonetta.
  • Even the Girls Want Her: Several. Qara Köz and Simonetta to name two.

"Simonetta possessed a pale, fair beauty so intense that no man could look at her without falling into a state of molten adoration, and nor could any woman."

"Why don't you go and masturbate a diseased goat?"