The Architect, by Melania G. Mazzucco

The fascinating story of Plautilla Bricci, the first modern female architect, in XNUMXth century Rome.

One day in 1624, a father takes his daughter to the beach of Santa Severa to see the remains of a chimerical creature, a stranded whale. The father, Giovanni Briccio, called the Briccio, treasures in his desk a tooth of that whale, which later her daughter, Plautilla, will keep all her life, along with the indelible memory of the animal that she saw as a child on that beach.

We are in the Rome of baroque splendor, the Rome of the popes, the Rome of Bernini and Pietro da Cortona, the Rome of intrigue, fanaticism, violence, pomp, debauchery and plague. Giovanni is a painter, playwright and musician. Plautilla is his second daughter, less graceful than the first-born, but destined to be an important woman. Her father will educate her in the art of painting and she will end up becoming an architect, the first female architect in modern history.

Now, in his maturity, Plautilla evokes his life: the decisive meeting with Abbot Elpidio Benedetti, patron and lover, who would become Mazarin's secretary; the construction of Il Vascello, the splendid ship-shaped villa that rises on one of the hills of Rome and whose authorship she will not be recognized at first...

Melania G. Mazzucco returns in style to the historical genre and to the recreation of a real figure from the art world, something she already did in her ambitious and exalted The Long Wait for the Angel, about Tintoretto. Here she meticulously and lavishly reconstructs a time of splendor and violence, and she tells the exciting story of a woman ahead of her time, a pioneer who broke barriers and opened paths.

You can now buy the novel “The Architect”, by Melania G. Mazzucco, here:

The Architect, by Melania G. Mazzucco
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