
Between Sea and Verse: Jacopo da Lentini and the Birth of the Italian Language
Thirteenth-century Sicily - a crossroads of empires, where the Mediterranean breeze carried the voices of Arabs, Greeks, Normans, and Latins.
Amid the brilliance of Emperor Frederick II's court, one man dared a different kind of revolution: he gave language to love.
His name was Jacopo da Lentini, a notary, a dreamer, and the first to transform the rough dialects of the South into poetry.
From his hand came the sonnet - the first ever written - and with it, the seed of the Italian language.
Through friendship and betrayal, through courtly intrigue and forbidden passion, Jacopo discovered that words could be stronger than swords, and that beauty itself could be an act of rebellion.
From Palermo to Messina, from the Emperor's palace to the silence of his final days, he wrote not for power, but for the simple, eternal need to be understood.
Between Sea and Verse is a sweeping historical novel that brings to life the world where Italy's voice was born - a world of light and dust, faith and desire, poetry and freedom.
It is the forgotten story of the Sicilian poet who spoke first, and in doing so, taught a nation to speak.