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Dante's Inferno (The Divine Comedy, Volume 1, Hell) Paperback – May 30, 2011

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 4,026 ratings

The Divine Comedy: Hell written by legendary author Dante Alighieri is widely considered to be one of the greatest books of all time. This great classic will surely attract a whole new generation of readers. For many, The Divine Comedy: Hell is required reading for various courses and curriculums. And for others who simply enjoy reading timeless pieces of classic literature, this gem by Dante Alighieri is highly recommended. Published by Classic Books International and beautifully produced, The Divine Comedy: Hell would make an ideal gift and it should be a part of everyone's personal library.

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (May 30, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 94 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1463532229
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1463532222
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 4.8 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.22 x 8.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 4,026 ratings

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4,026 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the writing style great, complex, and flowing nicely throughout. They appreciate the thoughtful introduction and metaphors and symbolism. Opinions are mixed on readability, with some finding it easy to understand and fast-paced, while others say the translation is hard to make. Readers also disagree on the plot, with others finding it interesting and scary, while still others find it disappointing and bizarre.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

43 customers mention "Plot"30 positive13 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the plot. Some find it interesting, fun, and useful in understanding The Inferno. They also appreciate the vivid imagery, vast psychological depth, and scathing social commentary. However, others find it disappointing, less faithful to the original, and bizarre.

"...is a long and complex poem, filled with vivid imagery, vast psychological depth, scathing social commentary, and deep theological questions...." Read more

"...Dante’s masterpiece is so engaging that it made me want to write my own modern inferno, featuring my current enemies on earth with a smattering of..." Read more

"front image of the paperback is really low res" Read more

"...It keeps all the flavor, tension, and character; and stays true to the original story...." Read more

30 customers mention "Writing style"25 positive5 negative

Customers find the writing style vivid, descriptive, and admirable. They also say the book flows nicely throughout and is easy to follow.

"...I still miss him.The Inferno is a long and complex poem, filled with vivid imagery, vast psychological depth, scathing social commentary..." Read more

"...of which Inferno is the first canticle is one of the high points in Western art." Read more

"...BUT, the INFERNO is a good poem, and some of the best poetry I found in my search...." Read more

"...Therefore, the prose is muscular yet eloquent, allowing for a great range of flexibility. I can't recommend this one highly enough...." Read more

28 customers mention "Documentation"22 positive6 negative

Customers find the documentation thoughtful, deep, and cleverly described. They also say the book is one of the most understandable versions of this classic, with helpful endnotes and organized description of the layers of hell. Readers also say it's an excellent place to start and a great first pages for substance abuse addicts.

"...vast psychological depth, scathing social commentary, and deep theological questions...." Read more

"...The most appreciated part of this book is the author’s explanations after each section. It helps me to see the background behind those lines...." Read more

"...The art insert is neat, and the book includes a thoughtful introduction by Jonathan Knight, the game's executive producer...." Read more

"...The downside for the scholarly types is that this edition does not include extensive notes on the text...." Read more

129 customers mention "Readability"76 positive53 negative

Customers are mixed about the readability. Some find the translation easy to understand, admirable as poetry, and beautifully written. They appreciate the word choice and pictures. However, some readers say the translation is hard to make.

"...the informational parts after each Canto; it helped make it easier to understand and more fascinating actually than the actual Cantos...." Read more

"...This makes it quite hard to read...." Read more

"An easy read in this “modern English translation” - and certainly a RECOMMENDED READ...." Read more

"...And the Mandelbaum translation is admirable as poetry (much more so than, say, Clive James' work).Why not 5?..." Read more

Good.
5 out of 5 stars
Good.
Haven't had the chance to read it yet between life and work! But came very quickly! And in perfect condition! Thank you!
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2013
This past spring I took a class on Dante in which we read the entirety of The Commedia. After taking some time to think about and digest this massive poem, I think I am finally ready to write my review.

At the opening of the poem, Dante awakes to find himself lost in a dark wood. Unable to leave the valley, he is greeted by the shade of Virgil, who tells him that he has been sent by Mary and Dante's dearly departed Beatrice to guide Dante through Hell, Purgatory, and eventually to the highest parts of Heaven. Although Dante is initially reluctant to go, he eventually follows Virgil down into the mouth of Hell.

While the idea of reading such a long old poem seems daunting, the language and imagery that Dante uses makes it as compelling and fresh as if it were written yesterday. It is, first and foremost, a journey, and the sights the pilgrim sees on his journey to the bottom of Hell are described in vivid and sometimes gross detail. Hell is a very physical place, full of bodies and bodily functions, and Dante doe snot skimp on the imagery. But as often as his language is crude, it is at times stunningly beautiful. There were similes that absolutely stopped me in my tracks with their perfection and beauty. If you want to read the Inferno for the first time, read it like a novel. Jump in, enjoy the story, gawk at the imagery, and stop to relish the beautiful passages.

Just as Dante the pilgrim takes Virgil as his guide through Hell, Dante the poet uses Virgil as a poetic guide in his attempt to write an epic that encompasses religion, politics, history, and the human experience. In each circle, Dante meets a new group of sinners who are in Hell for different reasons. The first thing to note about the damned is that they seem to be mostly from Florence. Seriously, sometimes I think Dante wrote this just so he could shove everyone he didn't like into the fiery pit. But in all seriousness, Dante's goal wasn't just to describe the afterlife, he was also trying to describe life on earth. By putting people from Florence in Hell or Heaven, Dante was commenting on what was happening in Italy at the time. Most important for Dante was the corruption he saw in the church, so there are entire cantos of the Inferno devoted to religious leaders, especially Popes, and especially Boniface, who was Pope at the time Dante was writing.

The other thing to note about the damned is how relatable they are, at least in the beginning. When you meet Paolo and Francesca in Canto V and listen to Francesca's story, you can't help but be drawn in and pity her. Dante the pilgrim pitied her too, and swoons (again, seriously, he spends like the first 10 cantos swooning left and right) due to his empathy for them. Again and again the pilgrim pities the damned, but as the canticle goes on this happens less and less. By the end of the canticle he has stopped pitying the shades at all, and instead feels that their damnation is deserved. Why did Dante the poet make the pilgrim transforming such a way? Just as the description of Hell also serves as a description of Earth and of the nature of the human soul, the pilgrim's journey through the afterlife mirrors the soul's journey from the dark wood of sin and error to enlightenment and salvation. Dante is at first taken in by the sinners because he is not wise enough to see through their excuses. He is too much like them to do anything other than pity them. As he goes through Hell, he learns more and shakes off the darkness of the wood, so that by the time he gets to the bottom he no longer pities the damned. Still, even in the lowest circles, the shades are all deeply human, and their stories of how they ended up in Hell are incredibly compelling.

Dante the poet shows again and again how similar the pilgrim and the damned really are. He constantly explores sins that he could have committed or paths that he could have taken, exposing his own weaknesses and confronting what would have been his fate if Beatrice and Mary had not sent Virgil to save him. I think it speaks to his bravery as a poet that he insisted on exposing not just the weaknesses in society, but also the weaknesses in his own character.
Dante the poet is also brave, I think, for tackling some very serious theological, political, and psychological issues. When Dante the pilgrim walks through the gate of Hell, the inscription on the gate says that the gate and Hell itself were made by "the primal love" of God. Here, Dante tackles one of the greatest theological questions; how can a just and loving God permit something as awful as Hell? While the real answer doesn't come until the Paradiso, Dante was brave to put that question in such stark and paradoxical terms.

Dante's constant indictments of the political and religious leaders of his day show bravery, intelligence, and a good degree of anger on his part. Before writing the Inferno, Dante had been exiled from his home city of Florence for being on the wrong side of a political scuffle. He was never able to return home, and his anger at the partisanship that caused his exile mixed with his longing for his home make the political themes of the poem emotionally charged and interesting to the reader, even today.

Lastly, Dante shows both bravery and a great deal of literary skill in his treatment of Virgil. Virgil is Dante's guide through Hell and, later, Purgatory. He leads Dante every step of the way, teaching him like a father would, protecting him from daemons and even carrying him on his back at one point. It is clear that Dante admires Virgil, and in some ways the poem is like a love song to him. Virgil, living before Christ, was obviously not Christian, so Dante's choice of Virgil as a guide through the Christian afterlife is really quite extraordinary. It shows that wisdom can be attained from the ancient world, and that the light of human reason, which Virgil represents, is necessary for the attainment of enlightenment and salvation. Dante believed strongly that reason and faith were not opposites, but partners, and his choice of Virgil as a guide is a perfect illustration of that principle.

But, despite Dante's love of Virgil, Virgil is, to me, one of the most tragic characters in literature. Virgil, as a pagan, cannot go to Heaven. He resides in Limbo, the first circle of Hell, home of the virtuous pagans. There, he and the other shades (including Homer, Plato, and others) receive no punishment except for their constant yearning for Heaven and the knowledge that they will never see the light of God. Virgil, at the request of Mary and Beatrice, leads Dante toward a salvation that he can never have. Human reason can only lead a soul so far; to understand the mysteries of Heaven one has to rely on faith and theology. Virgil's fate is the great tragedy of this otherwise comic poem, and the knowledge of that fate haunts the first two canticles. And while it makes sense thematically and in terms of the plot, Dante makes you love Virgil so much that his departure in the Purgatorio never really feels fair. I still miss him.

The Inferno is a long and complex poem, filled with vivid imagery, vast psychological depth, scathing social commentary, and deep theological questions. It is also a journey, a real adventure in a way, and a pleasure to read. Though the real fulfillment of Dante's themes does not come until the Paradiso, the Inferno is well worth reading on its own. Even if you don't go on to read the other two canticles, reading The Inferno is time well spent.

Rating: 5 stars
Recommendations: Read it. Skip the boring parts if you want to, but just read it.
90 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2023
I liked the informational parts after each Canto; it helped make it easier to understand and more fascinating actually than the actual Cantos. I was kinda worried at first that the images of how the different levels of hell were going to scare me (vivid imagination) I actually found it interesting to read. Another book off my bucket list.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2019
This masterpiece of medieval poetry is offered in an English verse translation from the mid-19th century. This matters because rendering Italian verse into English verse forces the translator into all sorts of contortions -- including using unusual and archaic words, changing the logical order of words in sentences, etc., in order to keep rhymes and prosody -- in addition to the use of words that were common in English 150 years ago but aren't anymore. This makes it quite hard to read. At the same time, there is a sense that this translation gets closer to the original complexity of the language -- a modern Italian speaker might find the same problems in the original from 700 years ago! The abundant footnotes are crucial to understanding the references Dante makes to his contemporaries, and the backstory of why they are now in hell. Without those, the text would often be impenetrable. Overall, this book is a double tour de force -- by author and translator. I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 because there must be easier to understand translations around, either more recent or less burdened by the demands of verse.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2024
As described
Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2017
If you do not have the patience to wait and see what Hell will be like for yourself, then this is the book for you. Replete with grotesque images of perpetually itchy scab-covered corpses, brains being devoured, repeated stabbings, and all sorts of terrible torments, Dante’s classic transfixes with equal part horror and guilty pleasure.

The reader will be mesmerized by the way Dante crafts punishments perfectly suited for the earthly crimes committed. For instance, people who have caused division have had their bodies divided, or — in Mandelbaum’s elegant translation — “ripped right from the chin to where we fart” (Canto 28.24).

An additional bonus for the reader is that Dante not only incorporates famous historical figures in Hell (such as Brutus, Caesar’s murderer, who has been placed in the deepest part of Hell accompanied by the joyful presence of only Judas Iscariot, Satan, and Cassius, a greedy megalomaniac who also plotted against Caesar), but also contemporaries. One can only imagine the disbelief, the distress, the distemper felt by Fra Alberigo and Branca Doria upon discovering that they had already been sentenced to a place so cold that “their first tears freeze into a cluster and, like a crystal visor, fill up all the hollow that is underneath the eyebrow,” leaving them desirous of a little global warming in the nether regions of the Pit of Fire, and leaving you regretful of all the things you said would happen when Hell freezes over (Canto 33.97-99).

Dante’s masterpiece is so engaging that it made me want to write my own modern inferno, featuring my current enemies on earth with a smattering of modern american and foreign politicians, corrupt business moguls, celebrities, famous criminals, etc. However, such a work would be a disgrace to Dante’s graceful, yet dark, first volume of the Divine Comedy which, although perhaps the least humorous “comedy” you’ll ever read, fully merits not only a first reading, but re-read upon re-read alongside extensive study.

An added bonus for the scholarly types out there is that Mandelbaum’s lucid english translation faces Dante’s original Italian. The downside for the scholarly types is that this edition does not include extensive notes on the text. For a more copiously annotated edition, see the translation from Robert and Jean Hollander instead, which is also probably a good place to start for more in-depth study of Dante’s classic, although Mandelbaum’s edition does contain a couple attached essays which provide a little background on Dante and his most famous work.
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Vittuccia
5.0 out of 5 stars Recieved.
Reviewed in Canada on June 17, 2024
As described and on time. Thanks
Crecio Assis
5.0 out of 5 stars Inferno.
Reviewed in Brazil on May 25, 2024
Perfeito!
Albin A
4.0 out of 5 stars Good!
Reviewed in Sweden on May 24, 2024
Good and nice book.
Gostei
4.0 out of 5 stars Bom
Reviewed in Spain on February 19, 2024
Gostei
KAZE
5.0 out of 5 stars Super
Reviewed in Germany on June 1, 2022
Sehr schön