611 pages

English language

Published Aug. 6, 2014

ISBN:
978-1-4000-7915-5
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OCLC Number:
870981602

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3 stars (4 reviews)

In Italy, Harvard professor Robert Langdon is drawn into a world centered on one of history's most mysterious literary masterpieces--Dante's "Inferno"--as he battles a chilling adversary and grapples with an ingenious riddle.

46 editions

reviewed Inferno by Dan Brown (Inferno, #4)

I'd Have Twoooo Nickels

5 stars

Content warning The Plot

reviewed Inferno by Dan Brown

A fast paced and enjoyable thriller

4 stars

A fast paced mystery through the streets of Italy. Dan Brown is a writer who knows how to keep up suspense and weave strands of ancient religious elements into the tapestry of his stories. Not a masterpiece but an enjoyable thriller.

reviewed Inferno by Dan Brown (Inferno, #4)

Review of 'Inferno' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

Let's dispense with the "This is crap literature!" crowd right away: you won't like me or what I write.

Dan Brown did, with "The DaVinci Code", create a mystery based around old symbols and myths, meshed together in what was quite a fun "little" book. There's nothing to be gained what so ever from claiming "It's not true!". No, it isn't. It's fantasy, and it was well done.

"Inferno", on the other hand, is simply one more of the same. Nothing wrong with that, but the mystery isn't mysterious any more, even tho the symbols are as complex and the clues as obscure. It is one, long list of complex and obscure.

The problem - the very REAL problem - for me was the philosophical claptrap. You might want to avoid the next paragraph.


Highly intelligent people. They suffer so much. Schools bore them; society wish to imprison them in …

Subjects

  • Inferno (Dante Alighieri)
  • Fiction
  • Cryptographers
  • Robert Langdon (Fictitious character)

Places

  • Italy
  • Florence
  • Florence (Italy)