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The Inferno

By Archibald T. Macallister, Dante Alighieri, John Ciardi (Translator)

(128)

| Paperback | 9780451527981

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Book Description

Considered to be one of the greatest literary works of all time- equal only to those of Shakespeare-Dante's immortal drama of a journey through Hell is the first volume of his Divine Comedy. The remaining canticles, The Purgatorio and The Paradiso, will be published this summer in quick succession.

Critics

  • Dante in Love

    Dante in Love, by AN Wilson, Atlantic, RRP£25, 400 pages Dante Alighieri (born Florence 1265, died Ravenna 1321) is, AN Wilson declares, “a modern poet”. This claim is justifiable. Over the past two centuries, Dante’s poetry has replaced the ancients ... (read full critics)

    ft published on Sat, 25 Jun 2011

  • The trump and the rump

    The Inferno of Dante Alighieri translated by Ciaran Carson 296pp, Granta, £14.99 There were at least 50 English translations of The Inferno in the 20th century alone, and now we have another, by the Belfast poet and novelist Ciaran Carson. It is a br ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sat, 25 Sep 2010

10 Reviews

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  • 1 person find this helpful

    If the Bible is the first reference book to get understanding of western culture, The Divine Comedy could be the second.

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    Scorpi said on May 4, 2008 | Add your feedback

  • 1 person find this helpful

    I actually have all three volumes separated, so I've only read "The Inferno" thus far, but loved Ciardi's poetic translation. It's beautiful, well-explicated and gives a reader a sense of why this poem has endured for so long and how it is truly "Divine."

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    guaddess said on May 13, 2007 | Add your feedback

  • Where's hell disappeared to since Dante?

    I read the verse translation into English by Dorothy L. Sayers. Although I found some of the vocabulary a little old-fashioned, I did zip through the 34 cantos, reading the very helpful intros before each one, and the barest minimum from the notes to make a little sense of the people encountered and ... (continue)

    I read the verse translation into English by Dorothy L. Sayers. Although I found some of the vocabulary a little old-fashioned, I did zip through the 34 cantos, reading the very helpful intros before each one, and the barest minimum from the notes to make a little sense of the people encountered and the terrible sins they had committed. I briefly tried a prose translation before this version, but found the lack of rhythm and colour a complete turn off.

    Concerning the actual content, I very much enjoyed reading the careful description of the geography of the place, following Dante's physical and emotional journey, keeping a respectful distance from stern and steady Virgil, and both pitying and recoiling in horror from the writhing, smothered, frozen, itching, burning, deformed tormented souls.

    The book was written when the desire to escape hell and reach heaven after death was a major driver in European societies, underpinning much of the economic system (think tithing, rich monasteries etc, the basic deal being "we pay, you pray for us and save us"). Mainstream Christian churches today have completely got rid of the image of grimacing demon with pitchforks in hell or angels, fluffy clouds and harps in heaven. It seems to me that heaven is now a completely abstract notion, a place of your choosing where you can find your loved ones again and meet God/Jesus, according to your fancy. And hell has apparently been dispensed with altogether. I'm not advocating a return to "rule through fear" approach for today's churches, but I do think that some sort of representation of the consequences of transgression might be no bad thing.

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    Hélène Wilkinson said on Sep 25, 2011 about the Others edition | Add your feedback

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