One Week in Venice: A Tale of Quantum Mystery

One Week in Venice: A Tale of Quantum Mystery

by Peter Lucia
One Week in Venice: A Tale of Quantum Mystery

One Week in Venice: A Tale of Quantum Mystery

by Peter Lucia

Paperback

$8.99 
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Overview

QUANTUM MYSTERY OR QUANTUM COMEDY? Chilling, surreal occurrences-starting with a monstrous creature on an arch-seize the interest of shy twenty-six-year-old Italian-American scholar Rich Travella and his high-strung Venetian girlfriend, Simonetta. Curiously, the historical Venetian surname "Tron" is coincident with each puzzling event. Could these strange happenings be a series of pranks by Simonetta's wealthy uncle, noted for his elaborate games? Or are they connected to a mysterious book formerly in his library-a 16th-Century "how-to" manual by Leonardo Tron, an author lost to history? Tron's subject is outlandish: the creation and prevention of coincidences. It's a work that seems to prefigure-and even exceed-the mysterious and seemingly supernatural 20th-Century science of quantum physics. And who are the peculiar, murderous people seeking the book for the powerful knowledge it supposedly contains? They draw Rich and Simonetta deeper and deeper into the dark and dangerous quest for the secret, mystical volume. Elegantly written, with a strong sense of place, One Week in Venice brings a wondrous city to life, at times in almost travelogue fashion. It's an unusual, exhilarating escapade with appealing central characters and the foulest of villains, a compact literary novel filled with humor (from highbrow to farcical), thought-provoking concepts, mystery, and murder. Also by Peter Lucia: "The Murder at Asbury Park"

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780974113920
Publisher: Peter Lucia Projects
Publication date: 06/11/2017
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 5.24(w) x 7.99(h) x 0.42(d)

About the Author

Peter Lucia was born and raised on the New Jersey Shore, where he still resides. He has degrees from Columbia University in Italian Studies with a very high concentration in Philosophy (both of which come together in "One Week in Venice"). He taught Italian as a graduate student at Columbia and Italian and English at Berlitz School of Languages in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills. His serious hobbies (and sometime-professions) include classical guitar, which he has played and studied, off and on, since the mid-1960s, computer art, photography, travel to Italy, local history, and all kinds of writing. He often contributes these skills to the personal projects of friends and family. He has no dogs, no cats, no wife and no kids.
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