About This Book
Don Ippolito, a frugal Venetian priest and obsessive inventor, devotes himself to delicate mechanical models and experimental devices while he endures social suspicion and financial insecurity. After losing his position as a tutor when his pupil marries, he pins hopes on transatlantic opportunity and visits the American consul seeking recognition. The narrative traces his mixture of ingenuity, embarrassment, and stubborn optimism, observing tensions between clerical duty and inventive ambition, the romanticization of technological progress abroad, and the quiet pathos of unappreciated talent.
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