Archive for May 15th, 2009

15
May

Get a Free Copy of Angels & Demons: an Insider’s Guide

Angels & Demons at Castel Sant'Angelo

So, today’s the big day!  Ron Howard’s Angels & Demons was released in Rome on Wednesday, 13 May and today it opens in theaters around the U.S.A.  We’re betting that lots of eCoolers will be dashing off to see the flick, if not for the suspense and action, then for the fantastic views of Rome that the movie is sure to offer.

As many of you will know, author Dan Brown published the book in 2000, but it didn’t really take off until after the DaVinci Code hit the bestseller list in 2003.  Since about 2003, however, Angels & Demons has become particularly popular with visitors to Rome, who “let the angels be their guide” as they make their way around the Eterna.

Angels on the Ponte Sant'Angelo in  Rome

The novel revolves around the quest of fictional Harvard University symbologist Robert Langdon (also featured in the DaVinci Code) to uncover the mysteries of a secret society called the Illuminati who are murdering Cardinals as part of a plot to annihilate Vatican City using destructive antimatter.

In order to prevent the destruction of the Vatican, Langdon sets off on the Path of Illumination in hopes of uncovering clues as to the disappearance of Cardinals and the location of the antimatter canister.   The Path leads Langdon to four major locations in Rome, each marked by an artwork crafted by 17th-century superstar sculptor Gianlorenzo Bernini, and each associated with what the Illuminati believed to be the four primordial elements of all things in existence: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water.

It’s those artworks by Bernini (as well as some other pretty fabulous masterpieces of art and architecture) that Angels & Demons tourists come to see–and who can blame them? Of course, many such visitors are also interested in the long histories of Rome and the Catholic Church and as they traipse along the Path of Illumination, they find themselves asking questions that Dan Brown hasn’t answered in his novel.  So what to do?

St. Peter's Basilica in Rome

Here at the eCool Compound, we have the answer!  We’ve just discovered that our friend Angela Nickerson, author of a lovely book called A Journey into Michelangelo’s Rome (which, by the way, makes a great guidebook to Renaissance Rome) has teamed up with Roaring Forties press to publish Rome’s Angels & Demons: an Insider’s Guidea free ebook with inside information about the art and places in Dan Brown’s book.

Rome’s Angels & Demons: An Insider’s Guide is filled with information about the historical figures, churches, artwork, and locations that figure prominently in Angels & Demons.  With maps, visitor information, photographs, and in-depth insights, it is a great guide to the city of Rome and the fascinating world Dan Brown has created.

To find out more about this free guide — great on Kindle or any e-reader, but also formatted so that you can print it and take it to Rome with you — visit Angela’s Just Go blog where she’s throwing a launch party that includes a Twitter-to-enter contest by which you might just win some fabulous Roman stuff, including a copy of her Michelangelo book and some eCool Sigg Bottles!  You can also download the book from the Roaring Forties Press website.  Remember, it’s absolutely free!

Reading Angels & Demons in Rome's Piazza Navona

15
May

Run for Pompeii

Pompeii

There’s been discussion here at the eCool Compound about getting ourselves out of bed early on Sunday the 17th to run the Race for the Cure here in Rome.  Now, however, Blogging Pompeii has divided our loyalties with their publication of news about the “Corri per Pompei” or Run for Pompeii that’s scheduled to take place on Saturday the 16th at 6pm.

An article about the race on Stabianews.tk says that starting line will be at Piazza Anfiteatro in the modern city of Pompeii and that the 10 kilometer and 3 kilometer routes will take runners through both the ancient archaeological site and the modern city.  How much of the race takes place on the ancient site?  We don’t know and we’d imagine that if it’s a lot the course could get a bit rough as even walking through ancient Pompeii can be tough on the feet, but nonetheless, we think this is one of the most eternally cool things we’ve heard about in a while.

For more information:  write to napolipompei@libero.it or call 081 857 62 71 or 338 10 52 494.

15
May

Holy Waters of Rome!

Eternally Cool Sigg Bottles

Hey eCoolers!  If you’ve ever been in Rome in the summer, then you know that there’s nothing more wonderful than the sound of a fountain gurgling with the sweet, cold water that bubbles up from the ground in and around the Eterna.  We love the waters of Rome, and we know that many of you do too, and so we thought we’d pay homage to them by designing some refillable Sigg bottles that you can tote around Rome (or wherever).

Help take care of the environment (no more plastic bottles!) and show your eCool pride by clicking on over to our online store and picking up one of these great one-liter bottles — you can choose a bottle with our classic red Rome logo or go for the eternally cool “we’re number one” symbol (aka the hand of the Colossal Constantine).   Either way, you’ll have a great bottle to tote around that will let everyone know just how much you love Rome.

Get your eCool Sigg bottle now!




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