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Iain Pears

    8 août 1955

    Iain Pears élabore des récits qui explorent l'interaction complexe de l'histoire, de l'art et de la nature humaine. Ses romans examinent souvent la manière dont les événements sont perçus et racontés sous de multiples angles, révélant la vérité à travers des couches d'interprétation. Pears excelle dans la construction d'histoires captivantes qui mettent à l'épreuve la capacité du lecteur à distinguer le fait de la fiction. Son style se caractérise par un souci méticuleux du détail et une profondeur intellectuelle, offrant une expérience de lecture riche et engageante.

    Iain Pears
    The Bernini Bust
    L'Affaire Raphaël
    Grands Détectives: Le secret de la Vierge à l'enfant
    La chute de John Stone
    Le Cercle de la Croix
    Le songe de Scipion
    • 2025

      Parallel Lives

      A Love Story from a Lost Continent

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      Parallel Lives
    • 2015

      Arcadia

      • 608pages
      • 22 heures de lecture
      3,9(4027)Évaluer

      The book was first released in hardcover in Great Britain by Faber Faber and Faber Ltd. in 2015. It showcases a unique narrative style and explores themes that resonate with contemporary readers, offering a fresh perspective on its subject matter. The publication marks a significant addition to the literary landscape of that year.

      Arcadia
    • 2009

      La chute de John Stone

      • 606pages
      • 22 heures de lecture
      3,9(231)Évaluer

      De la City londonienne et du Paris mondain de la Belle Époque aux palais vénitiens de la moitié du XIXe siècle, un roman magistral, porté par une construction éblouissante et une érudition aux troublantes résonances contemporaines. À la fois drame financier, roman d'espionnage et tragédie amoureuse, le nouveau tour de force littéraire d'Iain Pears, dans la droite ligne du Cercle de la Croix. Londres, 27 mars 1909. Lord Ravenscliff, né John Stone, célèbre industriel et marchand d'armes, tombe depuis la fenêtre de son bureau. Accident ? Meurtre ? Suicide ? Convoqué par la veuve de Stone, Elisabeth, de vingt-cinq ans sa cadette, le journaliste Braddock se voit chargé d'une étrange mission : retrouver l'enfant caché de Stone. Une enquête en terrain miné, entre hautes sphères de la finance internationale et clubs d'anarchistes, sur les traces d'un homme et de son épouse au mystérieux passé... Paris, 1890. C'est en tant que comtesse hongroise qu'Elisabeth tient un des salons les plus courus de la capitale. Confident de cette courtisane pleine d'ambition, l'espion britannique Cort assiste au rapprochement d'Elisabeth et de Stone. Les débuts d'une tumultueuse histoire d'amour au coeur d'un monde régi par le pouvoir de l'argent... Mais Elisabeth a-t-elle jamais su toute la vérité sur son mari ? Lui a-t-il tout dit de ses jeunes années à Venise, en pleine montée du spiritisme ? Quels secrets Stone a-t-il emportés avec lui dans sa chute ?

      La chute de John Stone
    • 2006

      Ein wertvolles Landschaftsgemälde wird aus einer Ausstellung in Rom gestohlen. Flavia di Stefano, Dezernentin für Kunstraub, muss den politisch heiklen Fall diskret lösen. Ihr Mentor General Bottando warnt vor möglichen Konsequenzen, bietet aber seine Hilfe an, bleibt jedoch bei der Herkunft eines anderen Gemäldes geheimnisvoll.

      Diabolische Täuschung. Kriminalroman
    • 2005

      A dark and disturbing novel of suspense, set at the turn of the 20th century, by the bestselling author of An Instance of the Fingerpost.

      The Portrait
    • 2003

      SuperPocket - 185: La Quarta Verità

      • 780pages
      • 28 heures de lecture

      Oxford 1663: un luogo e un momento storico di grandi fermenti politici, scientifici e religiosi. Un docente del New College viene trovato morto in circostanze misteriose. Una ragazza è accusata di stregoneria e di omicidio, e condannata all'impiccagione. Quattro testimoni raccontano la loro "verità": un cattolico veneziano, Marco da Cola; uno studente in medicina, Jack Prestcott; un insigne matematico e teologo, John Wallis; uno studioso dell'antichità, Anthony Wood. Ma uno soltanto di loro dice tutta la verità... Thriller di alto profilo e sorprendente originalità, sospeso tra finzione narrativa e fedele ricostruzione storica, "La quarta verità" ricrea magistralmente l'atmosfera, ma anche e soprattutto la mentalità di un'epoca tra le più complesse e affascinanti.

      SuperPocket - 185: La Quarta Verità
    • 2002

      Le songe de Scipion

      • 586pages
      • 21 heures de lecture
      3,9(172)Évaluer

      Le songe de Scipion dépeint le destin de trois hommes à des moments clés de la civilisation occidentale : l’effondrement de l’Empire romain au Ve siècle, les années de la Grande Peste au XIVe siècle et l’apogée du nazisme aux heures les plus sombres du XXe siècle. Manilius Hippomanes est un aristocrate obsédé par la survivance et la préservation de l’Empire, tout comme l’obsède l’exercice du pouvoir. Olivier de Noyen, un poète au service d’un puissant cardinal qui complote pour restaurer la papauté à Rome. Julien Barneuve, un intellectuel insatisfait, tenaillé par le doute et qui finira par rallier le gouvernement de Vichy. Un manuscrit ancien – œuvre de Manilius inspirée du fameux Songe de Scipion, tiré de De Republica de Cicéron – disparu puis ressurgi, partiellement transmis au fil du temps, sera réinterprété par Olivier et redécouvert par Julien.

      Le songe de Scipion
    • 2000

      Our Review When in Rome A stolen masterpiece with arcane allegorical significance; a decades-old political kidnapping and murder; and, of course, a tantalizing artwork of unknown provenance -- in his seventh Jonathan Argyll art mystery, The Immaculate Deception, English art historian Iain Pears returns with a virtuosic display of ingenious plotting and literary trompe l'oeil. Pears's clever and effortlessly erudite art mysteries have found a select readership on both sides of the Atlantic. But the phenomenal success of Pears's 1998 literary thriller, An Instance of the Fingerpost -- a multifaceted Restoration whodunit on a par with Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose -- has dramatically increased stateside interest in the author's earlier work. The Immaculate Deception once again centers on the exploits of the affable and perpetually distracted English art dealer Jonathan Argyll; the beautiful and formidable Flavia di Stefano of the Italian Art Theft Squad; and her erstwhile boss, General Taddeo Bottando, along with several of the series' usual -- or, more appropriately -- unusual supporting cast of suspects. When a masterpiece on loan for the opening of an international exhibition is stolen in a manner calculated to embarrass the Italian government, Flavia di Stefano is ordered by the newly installed prime minister to recover the painting at all costs. Her deceptively simple mandate quickly reveals itself to be a politically fraught, no-win situation. If is she meets the thief's ransom demands, she'll almost certainly be disgraced -- and perhaps go to jail; if she refuses the order, she'll be summarily removed from her post. With Jonathan jaunting through the Tuscan countryside on the trail of an interesting art collection, Flavia turns to her old friend and confidant General Bottando for advice. As a seasoned survivor of the Roman political arena himself, he suggests that she follow the time-honored convention and do as other Romans: "When faced with deviousness, you must be devious yourself." Working together, Flavia and Bottando devise a plan to recover the painting. But no sooner has the ransom been paid than the art-napper -- a former '60s radical turned bourgeois performance artist -- is found dead under highly suspicious circumstances. Worse, Bottando himself has disappeared without a trace, leaving Flavia to face her first major crisis as head of the Art Squad alone. Risking official censure and hounded by a sinister journalist, Flavia explores the tenuous connection between a decades-old act of terrorism and recent events, only to discover a secret conspiracy that could topple the government -- or cost her her life. Like Michael Dibdin's award-winning Aurelio Zen novels, Pears's Jonathan Argyll mysteries go beyond genre fundamentals to immerse readers in every aspect of contemporary Italian culture -- from its legendary art and cuisine to the labyrinthine bureaucracy of the political and criminal justice systems to candid, unexpectedly breathtaking portrayals of everyday life. The Immaculate Deception is a splendid addition to a mystery series of the first order, and an exuberant confirmation of Iain Pears as a modern master of the form. --Greg Marrs

      Grands Détectives: Le secret de la Vierge à l'enfant
    • 1999

      The Titian Committee

      • 202pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      When Louis Masterson, a member of the famous Titian Committee, is found stabbed to death in a Venetian public garden, General Bottando of Rome’s Art Theft Squad sends Flavia di Stefano to Venice to assist the local carabinieri. But it seems they don’t want her help or expertise, and are convinced a Sicilian mugger is responsible for the killing. Flavia has other ideas and calls upon the services of English art historian Jonathan Argyll, who is in Venice to buy a picture from the Marchesa di Mulino’s collection. When another member of the committee is found dead and the Marchesa’s collection is stolen, Flavia and Argyll follow a tortuous trail to unearth the truth behind both the killings and the theft. In the process, not only do they stumble across another murder, but come close to unravelling a mystery from Titian’s own life.

      The Titian Committee
    • 1999

      Giotto's Hand

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Someone's planning to raid an ancient monastery in Rome. But why? And when? Enter art expert Jonathan Argyll...

      Giotto's Hand