Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Memory Cathedral

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
December 1995

ISBN
  
978-0-553-09637-8

Author
  
Jack Dann

Cover artist
  
Tim Jacobus

3.5/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
485 pp (first edition)

Originally published
  
December 1995

Publisher
  
Bantam Books

The Memory Cathedral t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSV3mdYNuqlMKWi0z

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Genres
  
Fantasy Fiction, Historical Fiction

Awards
  
Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel

Similar
  
Jack Dann books, Speculative fiction books

The Memory Cathedral: A Secret History of Leonardo da Vinci is a 1995 historical fantasy fiction novel by Jack Dann. It follows Leonardo da Vinci constructing his flying machine and then travelling to the East.

Contents

Background

It was first published by Bantam Books in December 1995 and has been published in ten languages to date. It won the Australian Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel in 1997, was #1 on The Age bestseller list, and in 1996, a novella based on the novel, "Da Vinci Rising," was awarded the Nebula Award for Best Novella. The Memory Cathedral was also shortlisted for the Audio Book of the Year, which was part of the 1998 Braille & Talking Book Library Awards., and the 1997 Ditmar Award for Best Australian Long Fiction.

Synopsis

Dann's major historical novel depicts a version of the Renaissance in which Leonardo da Vinci actually constructs a number of his inventions, such as a flying machine, whose designs are well-known from his surviving sketches. He later employs some of his military inventions during a battle in the Middle East, while in the service of a Syrian general - events which Dann projects into a year of da Vinci's life about which little is known. The novel also presents a detailed imagining of the life and character of the inventor and painter during this period, and includes his encounters with other historical characters residing in Florence including Machiavelli and Botticelli.

The title refers to an ancient system of memory recall, or Mnemonics, in which a building, such as a cathedral, is constructed in the mind as a container for imagined objects - which are deliberately connected to particular memories. The building can later be mentally navigated to re-encounter those objects and retrieve the memories with which they are associated. Da Vinci's memory cathedral functions in the narrative as a device through which he reviews his experiences as death approaches.

References

The Memory Cathedral Wikipedia