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The Club Dumas

The Club Dumas (original Spanish title El Club Dumas) is a 1993 novel by Arturo Pérez-Reverte. The book is set in a world of antiquarian booksellers, echoing his previous 1990 work The Flanders Panel.

The Club Dumas
Cover of Random House edition
AuthorArturo Pérez-Reverte
Original titleEl Club Dumas
TranslatorSonia Soto
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish
GenreCrime novel, Mystery novel
PublisherAlfaguara
Publication date
1993
Published in English
1996
Media typePrint (Hardcover)

The story follows the adventures of a book dealer, Lucas Corso, who is hired to authenticate a rare manuscript by Alexandre Dumas, père. Corso's investigation leads him to seek out two copies of a (fictional) rare book known as De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis ("Of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows"). Corso encounters a host of intriguing characters on his journey of investigation, including devil worshippers, obsessed bibliophiles and a hypnotically enticing femme fatale. Corso's travels take him to Madrid (Spain), Sintra (Portugal), Paris (France), and Toledo (Spain).

The Club Dumas is full of details ranging from the working habits of Alexandre Dumas to how one might forge a 17th-century text, as well as insight into demonology.

Plot summary edit

Lucas Corso is a middle-aged book dealer with a reputation of doing anything—regardless of legality—for his privileged clientele. While in Madrid attempting to authenticate a previously unknown partial draft of The Three Musketeers, he is summoned to Toledo by Varo Borja, a notoriously eccentric and wealthy collector.

Borja has obtained a copy of a legendary book, Of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows, whose author was burned at the stake by the Inquisition. The book purportedly contains instructions for summoning the Devil. Only one copy of the book is supposed to have survived, but Borja claims three exist, two of which are elaborate forgeries. He hires Corso to compare the three copies and obtain the legitimate one by any means necessary. He promises to pay handsomely and cover all expenses.

Corso agrees, but continues to research the partial Dumas draft. The widow of the draft's previous owner, Liana Taillefer, insists the draft is a fake, but offers to buy it from Corso. After several encounters, she attempts to seduce Corso to obtain the draft; when he succumbs to her charms but refuses to surrender the manuscript, she becomes his enemy. She imagines herself as Milady de Winter, and uses a male associate (whom Corso nicknames "Rochefort") to follow Corso and attempt to retrieve the manuscript by force.

Corso confers with the Ceniza Brothers, book restoration experts with extensive knowledge of forgery. They give him basic knowledge to help him compare the copies of The Nine Doors.

On his way to Lisbon to visit the owner of one of the copies, he encounters a beautiful blonde with striking green eyes. She identifies herself as "Irene Adler", and suggests that she is a fallen angel. They part company before he meets with Victor Fargas. Fargas is a renowned collector who has been selling off his extensive library to maintain his ancestral mansion. Corso compares Fargas' copy of The Nine Doors to Borja's, and finds subtle differences in the illustration plates. Most bear the initials of the book's notorious author, but some of the plates bear the initials "L.F."

As Corso returns to his hotel, "Irene" guards Corso against an attack by "Rochefort". Corso leaves her to arrange a robbery of Fargas' mansion to obtain his copy of the book. "Irene" informs him that Fargas has been murdered and his copy has been burned. She and Corso leave for Paris.

Corso confers with Replinger, an antiquarian and Dumas scholar, who authenticates the Dumas manuscript. As they talk, Corso spies Liana. He returns to his hotel and bribes the concierge to locate her hotel. "Irene" visits him, and they discuss theology; she implies that she is a witness to the events of the War in Heaven.

Corso visits Baroness Ungern, whose charitable institution possesses the largest occult collection in Europe, including the third copy of The Nine Doors. They discuss the book's author, before Corso blackmails her with photo evidence of her Nazi sympathies so she will let him examine her copy. "Irene" calls to warn Corso that "Rochefort" is waiting outside. The Baroness translates the illustration captions while Corso compares Ungern's copy to Borja's.

Later, Corso realizes that, while none of the three sets match each other, the plates bearing the initials "L.F." form a complete set of nine without duplications, and realizes the nine illustrations form a list of instructions for the famed summoning ritual. "Rochefort" attacks again, and is again repelled by "Irene".

Using the concierge's information, Corso confronts Liana and her associate, but "Rochefort" renders him unconscious. When he revives, Borja's copy and the Dumas manuscript are gone. He learns that the Baroness has been killed in a fire at her library.

Using Liana's obsession with Milady de Winter, he traces her to Meung, where he is captured by "Rochefort". "Rochefort" is instructed by a man calling himself "Richelieu" to bring Corso to a nearby castle. "Richelieu" introduces him to the Club Dumas, a literary society of wealthy Dumas enthusiasts, who are gathered for their annual banquet. Corso is astonished to find that they only want to see the Dumas manuscript, and know nothing about The Nine Doors. He is invited to stay for the party, but chooses to leave.

Corso returns to Spain to confront Borja. "Irene" insists that she is a fallen angel who has wandered the earth for millennia searching for him. Corso does not question this, and finds himself even more strongly attracted to her. He accuses Borja of being responsible for both murders. Borja, intending to use the ritual described by the book's true nine plates to summon the Devil and gain ultimate knowledge, has destroyed his entire library to prevent others from following his lead. Corso demands payment, but Borja ignores him and begins the ritual. Corso leaves in disgust; as he leaves, he hears Borja's screams of anguish as the ritual goes awry, remembering the Ceniza Brothers' discourse on false books and realizing one of the plates is a forgery. He joins "Irene" outside, and surmises that each of them will get the devil they deserve.

Literary references edit

The Club Dumas references many books. Several of the references are not to a work itself, but to a singular instance of the physical book, such as a rare edition or type of binding. Several of these books are inventions of Perez-Reverte.

Real books edit

The works of Alexandre Dumas, père, the source of the eponymous title, influence nearly every element of the plot. The books mentioned are as follows:

Also mentioned are works by Dumas' ghostwriter Auguste Maquet, including in particular, Le Bonhomme Buvat or the Conspiracy of Cellamare, published in Le Siècle, the magazine in which The Three Musketeers originally appeared between March and July 1844.

Other works mentioned are:

Fictional books edit

Occultist works published by the fictional historical author Aristide Torchia in Venice:

  • De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis, Venice, 1666. translated as The Nine Doors [or Gates] to the Kingdom of Shadows. While itself fictional, many aspects of The Nine Doors appear to be heavily inspired by the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili of Colonna (1499).[8]
  • Key to Captive Thoughts, 1653.
  • A Curious Explanation of Mysteries and Hieroglyphs.
  • The Three Books of the Art, 1658.
  • Nicholas Tamisso, The Secrets of Wisdom, 1650.
  • Bernard Trevisan, The Lost Word ("Verbum Dismissum"), 1661. A fictional edition of an actual 14th-century alchemy treatise.

Other occultist writings in novel The Club Dumas:

  • Asclemandres. A book mentioning the existence of the Delomalanicon
  • Delomelanicon, or Invocation of Darkness. A long-destroyed book containing a formula for summoning the Devil, supposedly written by Lucifer himself.
  • De origine, moribus et rebus gestis Satanae.[3]
  • Dissertazioni sopra le apparizioni de' spiriti e diavoli.[3]
  • Destructor omnium rerum.[3]
  • Theatrum Diabolicum.[4]
  • De Magna Imperfectaque.[4]

Books written by the character Baroness Ungern (inspired by Helena Blavatsky):

  • Isis, the Naked Virgin. (Refers to Isis unveiled by Helena Blavatsky)
  • The Devil, History and Legend.

Books by Boris Balkan:

  • Lupin, Raffles, Rocambole, and Holmes.
  • Dumas: the Shadow of a Giant.
  • Crozet, Encyclopedia of Printers and Rare and Curious Books
  • Mateu, Universal Bibliography. A 1929 rare book guide used by Corso and his rivals.
  • Julio Ollero, Dictionary of Rare and Improbable Books.

Books by Enrique Taillefer:

  • The Thousand Best Desserts of La Mancha. A cooking book.
  • The Secrets of Barbecue. A cooking book.
  • The Dead Man's Hand, or Anne of Austria's Page. Taillefer's unpublished novel, cribbed largely from Angeline de Gravaillac.
  • Amaury de Verona, Angeline de Gravaillac, or Unsullied Virtue, published in the 19th century in The Popular Illustrated Novel.

Books by an unnamed Nobel Prize-winning author:

  • I, Onan
  • In Search of Myself
  • Oui, C'est Moi.

Book by Don Jaime Astarloa, (hero of Perez-Reverte's novel The Fencing Master):

  • Treatise on the Art of Fencing.

Aristide Torchia edit

Aristide Torchia, a fictional historical author from the novel, has been referred to in other media including The Ninth Gate (a film based on the novel), and video game Max Payne.

The fictional character Torchia was born in 1620. He was apprenticed in Leyden under the Elzevir family. After returning to Venice he published small works on philosophical and esoteric themes. In 1666, Torchia published De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis (The Nine Doors to the Kingdom of Shadows), which was in turn based on the Delomelanicon, or Invocation of Darkness, a work supposedly written by Lucifer and that would allow the reader to summon devils. The Inquisition condemned Torchia for magic and witchcraft and burned him at the stake in 1667.

Film adaptation edit

Roman Polanski's film The Ninth Gate (1999) was adapted from Pérez-Reverte's novel. While following the same basic plotline for the first two-thirds of the film, the finale is greatly altered in the movie. Several characters' roles diminish, expand, merge, swap or disappear completely, and one of the novel's most important subplots – the Dumas connection – is removed entirely.

Awards edit

In 1998, The Club Dumas was nominated for the Anthony Award for Best Novel, the Macavity Award for Best Novel, and the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Appearing in the library of the recently deceased Enrique Taillefer
  2. ^ a b c Recommended by Corso to barkeep Makarova
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Appearing in Victor Fargas' collection.
  4. ^ a b c Appearing in Varo Borja's collection.
  5. ^ a b c d e Appearing at the Ungern Foundation library
  6. ^ Mentioned early in The Club Bumas[sic?]
  7. ^ Appearing in Boris Balkan's library.
  8. ^ "The Ninth Gate Opens".

club, dumas, original, spanish, title, club, dumas, 1993, novel, arturo, pérez, reverte, book, world, antiquarian, booksellers, echoing, previous, 1990, work, flanders, panel, cover, random, house, editionauthorarturo, pérez, reverteoriginal, titleel, club, du. The Club Dumas original Spanish title El Club Dumas is a 1993 novel by Arturo Perez Reverte The book is set in a world of antiquarian booksellers echoing his previous 1990 work The Flanders Panel The Club DumasCover of Random House editionAuthorArturo Perez ReverteOriginal titleEl Club DumasTranslatorSonia SotoCountrySpainLanguageSpanishGenreCrime novel Mystery novelPublisherAlfaguaraPublication date1993Published in English1996Media typePrint Hardcover The story follows the adventures of a book dealer Lucas Corso who is hired to authenticate a rare manuscript by Alexandre Dumas pere Corso s investigation leads him to seek out two copies of a fictional rare book known as De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis Of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows Corso encounters a host of intriguing characters on his journey of investigation including devil worshippers obsessed bibliophiles and a hypnotically enticing femme fatale Corso s travels take him to Madrid Spain Sintra Portugal Paris France and Toledo Spain The Club Dumas is full of details ranging from the working habits of Alexandre Dumas to how one might forge a 17th century text as well as insight into demonology Contents 1 Plot summary 2 Literary references 2 1 Real books 2 2 Fictional books 2 3 Aristide Torchia 3 Film adaptation 4 Awards 5 ReferencesPlot summary editLucas Corso is a middle aged book dealer with a reputation of doing anything regardless of legality for his privileged clientele While in Madrid attempting to authenticate a previously unknown partial draft of The Three Musketeers he is summoned to Toledo by Varo Borja a notoriously eccentric and wealthy collector Borja has obtained a copy of a legendary book Of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows whose author was burned at the stake by the Inquisition The book purportedly contains instructions for summoning the Devil Only one copy of the book is supposed to have survived but Borja claims three exist two of which are elaborate forgeries He hires Corso to compare the three copies and obtain the legitimate one by any means necessary He promises to pay handsomely and cover all expenses Corso agrees but continues to research the partial Dumas draft The widow of the draft s previous owner Liana Taillefer insists the draft is a fake but offers to buy it from Corso After several encounters she attempts to seduce Corso to obtain the draft when he succumbs to her charms but refuses to surrender the manuscript she becomes his enemy She imagines herself as Milady de Winter and uses a male associate whom Corso nicknames Rochefort to follow Corso and attempt to retrieve the manuscript by force Corso confers with the Ceniza Brothers book restoration experts with extensive knowledge of forgery They give him basic knowledge to help him compare the copies of The Nine Doors On his way to Lisbon to visit the owner of one of the copies he encounters a beautiful blonde with striking green eyes She identifies herself as Irene Adler and suggests that she is a fallen angel They part company before he meets with Victor Fargas Fargas is a renowned collector who has been selling off his extensive library to maintain his ancestral mansion Corso compares Fargas copy of The Nine Doors to Borja s and finds subtle differences in the illustration plates Most bear the initials of the book s notorious author but some of the plates bear the initials L F As Corso returns to his hotel Irene guards Corso against an attack by Rochefort Corso leaves her to arrange a robbery of Fargas mansion to obtain his copy of the book Irene informs him that Fargas has been murdered and his copy has been burned She and Corso leave for Paris Corso confers with Replinger an antiquarian and Dumas scholar who authenticates the Dumas manuscript As they talk Corso spies Liana He returns to his hotel and bribes the concierge to locate her hotel Irene visits him and they discuss theology she implies that she is a witness to the events of the War in Heaven Corso visits Baroness Ungern whose charitable institution possesses the largest occult collection in Europe including the third copy of The Nine Doors They discuss the book s author before Corso blackmails her with photo evidence of her Nazi sympathies so she will let him examine her copy Irene calls to warn Corso that Rochefort is waiting outside The Baroness translates the illustration captions while Corso compares Ungern s copy to Borja s Later Corso realizes that while none of the three sets match each other the plates bearing the initials L F form a complete set of nine without duplications and realizes the nine illustrations form a list of instructions for the famed summoning ritual Rochefort attacks again and is again repelled by Irene Using the concierge s information Corso confronts Liana and her associate but Rochefort renders him unconscious When he revives Borja s copy and the Dumas manuscript are gone He learns that the Baroness has been killed in a fire at her library Using Liana s obsession with Milady de Winter he traces her to Meung where he is captured by Rochefort Rochefort is instructed by a man calling himself Richelieu to bring Corso to a nearby castle Richelieu introduces him to the Club Dumas a literary society of wealthy Dumas enthusiasts who are gathered for their annual banquet Corso is astonished to find that they only want to see the Dumas manuscript and know nothing about The Nine Doors He is invited to stay for the party but chooses to leave Corso returns to Spain to confront Borja Irene insists that she is a fallen angel who has wandered the earth for millennia searching for him Corso does not question this and finds himself even more strongly attracted to her He accuses Borja of being responsible for both murders Borja intending to use the ritual described by the book s true nine plates to summon the Devil and gain ultimate knowledge has destroyed his entire library to prevent others from following his lead Corso demands payment but Borja ignores him and begins the ritual Corso leaves in disgust as he leaves he hears Borja s screams of anguish as the ritual goes awry remembering the Ceniza Brothers discourse on false books and realizing one of the plates is a forgery He joins Irene outside and surmises that each of them will get the devil they deserve Literary references editThe Club Dumas references many books Several of the references are not to a work itself but to a singular instance of the physical book such as a rare edition or type of binding Several of these books are inventions of Perez Reverte Real books edit The works of Alexandre Dumas pere the source of the eponymous title influence nearly every element of the plot The books mentioned are as follows The Three Musketeers Edition by Miguel Guijarro in four volumes with engravings by Ortega 1 The Countess de Charny Edition by Vicente Blasco Ibanez in eight volumes part of the Illustrated Novel collection 1 The Two Dianas Edition in three volumes 1 The Count of Monte Cristo Edition by Juan Ros in four volumes with engravings by A Gil The Forty Five 1 The Queen s Necklace 1 The Companions of Jehu 1 From Madrid to Cadiz Queen Margot Le Chevalier de Maison Rouge Apparent original title The Knight of Rougeville Also mentioned are works by Dumas ghostwriter Auguste Maquet including in particular Le Bonhomme Buvat or the Conspiracy of Cellamare published in Le Siecle the magazine in which The Three Musketeers originally appeared between March and July 1844 Other works mentioned are Richard Adams Watership Down 2 Georg Agricola De re metallica Latin edition by Froben and Episcopius Basle 1556 3 Cornelius Agrippa De Occulta Philosophia Latin edition Cologne 1533 4 Dante Alighieri The Divine Comedy the works of John James Audubon A hypothetical find that would make Corso and La Ponte very wealthy the works of Azorin Berengario de Carpi Tractatus Luis de Camoes Os Lusiadas First edition in four volumes Ibarra 1789 3 Jacques Cazotte The Devil in Love Miguel de Cervantes Los trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda an edition signed by Trautz Bauzonnet or Hardy Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros Complutensian Polyglot Bible Six volume edition 3 Simone de Colines Praxis criminis persequendi 1541 3 Jacques Collin de Plancy Dictionnaire Infernal 1842 3 Arthur Conan Doyle Sherlock Holmes stories including A Study in Scarlet and A Scandal in Bohemia Nicolaus Copernicus De revolutionis celestium Second edition Basle 1566 3 Corpus Hermeticum Cited as mentioning the Delomelanicon Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras Memoires de M d Artagnan Martin Delrio Disquisitionum Magicarum 1599 1600 A three volume work on demonic magic 5 Charles Dickens The Pickwick Papers Spanish edition translated by Benito Perez Galdos 1 Fyodor Dostoevsky The Brothers Karamazov Albrecht Durer De Symmetria Paris Nuremberg 1557 in Latin 3 any version of Faust Paul Feval nine books including Le Bossu and a quotation from Le Bossu heading Chapter 3 6 Leonardo Fioravanti Compendio dei secreti 1571 3 Francesco Maria Guazzo Compendium Maleficarum 5 Patricia Highsmith Carol 2 Victor Hugo The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1 Pope Innocent VIII Summis desiderantes affectibus Athanasius Kircher Oedipus Aegyptiacus Rome 1652 3 Heinrich Kramer Malleus Maleficarum 1519 Lyon edition 5 Pierre de La Porte Memoirs Written by a man in the confidence of Anne of Austria Charles Maturin Melmoth the Wanderer Being read by Irene Adler in the hotel after Corso has been to visit Fargas Herman Melville Moby Dick The book forms the initial basis of the friendship between Lucas Corso and Flavio La Ponte Prosper Merimee Corsican Revenge 1 John Milton Paradise Lost Margaret Mitchell Gone with the Wind Marco Polo The Book of Wonders Pierre Alexis Ponson du Terrail Rocambole In forty volumes Marcel Proust Swann s Way Volume One In Search of Lost Time Nicholas Remy Daemonolatreiae libri tres 5 Lucas de Rene The Knight with the Yellow Doublet 7 Roederer Political and Romantic Intrigue from the Court of France Fernando de Rojas La Celestina Rafael Sabatini Captain Blood Rafael Sabatini Scaramouche Hartmann Schedel Nuremberg Chronicle 3 Ludovico Maria Sinistrari De Daemonialitate et Incubis et Succubis 1680 manuscript London 1875 printed edition 5 Stendhal The Charterhouse of Parma Supposedly translated by the narrator Eugene Sue The Mysteries of Paris 1 Leo Tolstoy War and Peace 2 Jacobus de Voragine Golden Legend Edition by Nicolas Kesler Basle 1493 3 Vulgata Clementina 3 Michel Zevaco The Pardellanes 1 Fictional books edit Occultist works published by the fictional historical author Aristide Torchia in Venice De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis Venice 1666 translated as The Nine Doors or Gates to the Kingdom of Shadows While itself fictional many aspects of The Nine Doors appear to be heavily inspired by the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili of Colonna 1499 8 Key to Captive Thoughts 1653 A Curious Explanation of Mysteries and Hieroglyphs The Three Books of the Art 1658 Nicholas Tamisso The Secrets of Wisdom 1650 Bernard Trevisan The Lost Word Verbum Dismissum 1661 A fictional edition of an actual 14th century alchemy treatise Other occultist writings in novel The Club Dumas Asclemandres A book mentioning the existence of the Delomalanicon Delomelanicon or Invocation of Darkness A long destroyed book containing a formula for summoning the Devil supposedly written by Lucifer himself De origine moribus et rebus gestis Satanae 3 Dissertazioni sopra le apparizioni de spiriti e diavoli 3 Destructor omnium rerum 3 Theatrum Diabolicum 4 De Magna Imperfectaque 4 Books written by the character Baroness Ungern inspired by Helena Blavatsky Isis the Naked Virgin Refers to Isis unveiled by Helena Blavatsky The Devil History and Legend Books by Boris Balkan Lupin Raffles Rocambole and Holmes Dumas the Shadow of a Giant Crozet Encyclopedia of Printers and Rare and Curious Books Mateu Universal Bibliography A 1929 rare book guide used by Corso and his rivals Julio Ollero Dictionary of Rare and Improbable Books Books by Enrique Taillefer The Thousand Best Desserts of La Mancha A cooking book The Secrets of Barbecue A cooking book The Dead Man s Hand or Anne of Austria s Page Taillefer s unpublished novel cribbed largely from Angeline de Gravaillac Amaury de Verona Angeline de Gravaillac or Unsullied Virtue published in the 19th century in The Popular Illustrated Novel Books by an unnamed Nobel Prize winning author I Onan In Search of Myself Oui C est Moi Book by Don Jaime Astarloa hero of Perez Reverte s novel The Fencing Master Treatise on the Art of Fencing Aristide Torchia edit Aristide Torchia a fictional historical author from the novel has been referred to in other media including The Ninth Gate a film based on the novel and video game Max Payne The fictional character Torchia was born in 1620 He was apprenticed in Leyden under the Elzevir family After returning to Venice he published small works on philosophical and esoteric themes In 1666 Torchia published De Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis The Nine Doors to the Kingdom of Shadows which was in turn based on the Delomelanicon or Invocation of Darkness a work supposedly written by Lucifer and that would allow the reader to summon devils The Inquisition condemned Torchia for magic and witchcraft and burned him at the stake in 1667 Film adaptation editRoman Polanski s film The Ninth Gate 1999 was adapted from Perez Reverte s novel While following the same basic plotline for the first two thirds of the film the finale is greatly altered in the movie Several characters roles diminish expand merge swap or disappear completely and one of the novel s most important subplots the Dumas connection is removed entirely Awards editIn 1998 The Club Dumas was nominated for the Anthony Award for Best Novel the Macavity Award for Best Novel and the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel References edit a b c d e f g h i j k Appearing in the library of the recently deceased Enrique Taillefer a b c Recommended by Corso to barkeep Makarova a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Appearing in Victor Fargas collection a b c Appearing in Varo Borja s collection a b c d e Appearing at the Ungern Foundation library Mentioned early in The Club Bumas sic Appearing in Boris Balkan s library The Ninth Gate Opens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Club Dumas amp oldid 1222284166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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