Member Reviews
This was a unique and beautiful book that was poetic in its retelling of Dante’s Inferno. The added bonus of amazing artwork was a pleasant surprise and really made me wish to see this in a physical copy, so I will be looking for that when it comes out.
The book is broken up into the “Songs” of Dante’s original work and each was well done. I think some were more profoundly insightful than others, but that may have just been for me. And as with any reading, if you reread something at a different stage in your own life, your perspective changes and therefore, things that may have not been as memorable become more so.
This is a book that requires you to be in the frame of mind for it, maybe more philosophical and poetically leaning to truly appreciate it. It certainly hit me at the right time so I enjoyed it and I am very glad that I had the NG copy of it because I’m not certain that I would have thought to pick it up in a bookstore but I am so glad I did.
I highly recommend this for the reader who wants a gorgeously illustrated and poetic book retelling of Dante’s Inferno.
It has been almost 700 years since Dante wrote The Divine Comedy. How well does a book that old stand up in the modern world? Dante included people from his time in the book that most people do not know and probably many in Europe at the time would not have known either. It is also a book centered on religious themes. The Inferno's levels of Hell were divided by the type of sin and each sin receiving more punishment as one descends the levels. Dante would also break the rules of his time and write in the local Italian dialect rather than Latin so that a more significant portion of the population could read it.
Jobling, taking a page from Dante, wants to make The Divine Comedy more accessible to people. Granted many people have little interest in reading a 700-year-old, long narrative poem that featured local religious and political figures along with a heavy dose of Catholic dogma. For those who have read it, The Divine Comedy is a bit more than that; it is a journey. To make the original a bit more readable to the average person. First, the religious overtones are removed and replaces with more modern themes. He also replaces the poetry with a more straightforward but still eloquent text:
The forester pointed further away,
and I saw Sappho from Lesbos,
talking to Lao Tzu and Buddha.
They were people, or as like people
as anyone was down here.
And then Krishna and Mohammed talking to Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi.
And then crouching quiet in a corner, Einstein.
And nearby were Cleopatra and Carl Gustav Jung.
This is a dream I thought, a fiction,
but I knew it was not.
It was me, in the middle of my life.
Rather than a heavy emphasis on the seven deadly sins, a more modern approach is taken:
I saw people there up to their eyebrows in boiling blood.
“These are the terrorists of this world,
the violence-loving believers,” said my forester.
and
Or our very world itself, given to us –
those who break its nature, deliberately,
as if it were nothing
as if they themselves were the world,
denying the wonder of that which they are a part,
denying the sense of creation,
the spirit of the origin of nature.
The modern take on sin and the more prose approach to the Divine Comedy do not seem to take away from the meaning of the original. Jobling plans to write Purgatory and Paradise for the 700th anniversary. These will be more difficult tasks. Hell, after all, is a fascinating place to visit. Most who read the original either only read the Inferno or the Inferno was their favorite or most memorable part. If Jobling does as well as he did with Inferno, Purgatory might be an exciting read (it is an incredibly dull place in the original). A well-done re-imagining of a classic for modern times.
This book didn't particularly excited me, however i did like the way the author presents de history but i just didnt feel was my cup of tea i feel it a bit boring
A very interesting story that was not able to sustain my attention for the totality of the narrative. An admirable attempt.
I jumped at the chance to read and learn more about Dante, but this title left me pretty disappointed. There wasn't much to this title.
Peter Jobling takes us on a creative literary journey, drawing on one of my all-time favorite texts. I would gladly use this book in a course about poetry or in a class looking into comparative literature. It's also a damn good reading experience.