Rita Monaldi
Rita Monaldi (born 1966) is an Italian journalist and writer who, in collaboration with her husband, Francesco Sorti, wrote a series of literary-historical books called Imprimatur, Secretum and Veritas, with Atto Melani as a central character. She majored in classical philology and specialized in the history of religions.[1][2] They both live with their two young children in Vienna.
All the book titles of the series will create the sentence Imprimatur secretum, veritas mysterium. Unicum … The authors translate this as follows: “Even when a secret is printed, the truth is always a mystery. It remains only…” The authors are keeping secret the titles of the final two volumes. They claim the novel was boycotted in Italy.[3]
Works
- Imprimatur
- Secretum
- Veritas
- Mysterium
Reviews
In 2009, The Scotsman newspaper reported that:
Rita Monaldi and Francesco Sorti had been working on another "story" for years, which they decided they would turn into a historical novel. What their research had uncovered had startled them, even surprised them, although when we consider the times they were researching – the late 17th century – perhaps they should have expected to uncover all sorts of dubious information. But their historical investigations concerned a former Pope, Innocent XI. They fashioned their findings about him into a novel, and the result was: a commercial and critical boycott.[4]
References
- ↑ "A papal mystery". The Independent. London. 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
- ↑ http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/s/rita-monaldi-and-francesco-sorti/
- ↑ Malcolm Moore (20 Mar 2008). "Vatican forced us out of Italy, claim authors". The Telegraph. London.
- ↑ Lesley McDowell (5 September 2009). "The Pope and the Sun King: Rita Monaldi and Francesco Sorti discuss their new novel". The Scotsman.