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A review by littlebabyducks
The Inferno by Dante Alighieri
4.0
Listen. I will have absolutely nothing meaningful to say about a book that probably takes up entire semesters at universities, so I'll just ramble a few opinions on my own experience with it and leave it at that.
This has more gossipy name dropping than a celebrity memoir. Unfortunately, I didn't know who half these heathens were, so I did utilize the notes at the end of each canto. I spent some time thinking about this being done in modern day - just assigning a bunch of folks you don't care for to various circles of Hell. How fun!
The little summary before the canto verses in my version (Ciardi translation) was useful as well, but it did take away a bit of the "fun challenge" in figuring out what is going on in the verses. Your utilization and enjoyment of that may vary depending on your experience with this style of writing. I found this translation to be a fairly easy (almost too easy?) read.
This was pretty wild. Between the aforementioned gossip, the figuring out what some of these poor sinning souls had done to be in their assigned "circle" of Hell, the varying punishments, the whiplash inducing "I feel so bad for that fella" vs "The sonava bleep deserves it!" (largely based on own biases it seems), and the Virgil worship, I felt like I was slowly losing my mind (but in a kind of fun way).
I'm having a hard time deciding if this is one of those great because it is great books or great because of when it was written books. Perhaps I would have felt more of the hype if I had been in school when I first read it? As it is, this wasn't bad. I'm happy I finally read it. I'll likely remember quite a bit of it years from now. I was sharing parts of it with my family frequently (completely against their will but that's neither here nor there). There is a lot in here to mull over, reread, digest.
A couple of my favorite lines:
. . . Season by season her changes change her changes endlessly.
(Plan to use this each time I'm being annoyingly indecisive in the future.)
Reader, so may God grant you to understand
my poem and profit from it, ask yourself
how I could check my tears, when near at hand
I saw the image of our humanity
distorted so that the tears that burst from their eyes
ran down the cleft of their buttocks.
(I know Dante is all torn up about these sinners having their heads forever facing backwards, but the image of them crying tears into their buttcracks is just too funny to not chuckle over).
This is tough to rate, so this is based completely on what my reading experience enjoyment was and not where I think it ranks on all books of all time (because quite frankly, I couldn't even begin to give a useful opinion on that).
3.5 Rounding to 4 Stars
This has more gossipy name dropping than a celebrity memoir. Unfortunately, I didn't know who half these heathens were, so I did utilize the notes at the end of each canto. I spent some time thinking about this being done in modern day - just assigning a bunch of folks you don't care for to various circles of Hell. How fun!
The little summary before the canto verses in my version (Ciardi translation) was useful as well, but it did take away a bit of the "fun challenge" in figuring out what is going on in the verses. Your utilization and enjoyment of that may vary depending on your experience with this style of writing. I found this translation to be a fairly easy (almost too easy?) read.
This was pretty wild. Between the aforementioned gossip, the figuring out what some of these poor sinning souls had done to be in their assigned "circle" of Hell, the varying punishments, the whiplash inducing "I feel so bad for that fella" vs "The sonava bleep deserves it!" (largely based on own biases it seems), and the Virgil worship, I felt like I was slowly losing my mind (but in a kind of fun way).
I'm having a hard time deciding if this is one of those great because it is great books or great because of when it was written books. Perhaps I would have felt more of the hype if I had been in school when I first read it? As it is, this wasn't bad. I'm happy I finally read it. I'll likely remember quite a bit of it years from now. I was sharing parts of it with my family frequently (completely against their will but that's neither here nor there). There is a lot in here to mull over, reread, digest.
A couple of my favorite lines:
. . . Season by season her changes change her changes endlessly.
(Plan to use this each time I'm being annoyingly indecisive in the future.)
Reader, so may God grant you to understand
my poem and profit from it, ask yourself
how I could check my tears, when near at hand
I saw the image of our humanity
distorted so that the tears that burst from their eyes
ran down the cleft of their buttocks.
(I know Dante is all torn up about these sinners having their heads forever facing backwards, but the image of them crying tears into their buttcracks is just too funny to not chuckle over).
This is tough to rate, so this is based completely on what my reading experience enjoyment was and not where I think it ranks on all books of all time (because quite frankly, I couldn't even begin to give a useful opinion on that).
3.5 Rounding to 4 Stars