Marcus Sanders
Author of Dante's Inferno
About the Author
Series
Works by Marcus Sanders
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Education
- San Francisco State University
- Occupations
- Editor in Chief, Surfline.com
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- San Francisco, California, USA
- Map Location
- USA
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Reviews
I’m not especially fond of the Paradiso as Dante wrote it in the first place. Even St John the Apostle, who had the best claim to having personally been there, had a great deal of difficulty expressing his experience, and Dante never convinced me that he’s actually been there; he doesn’t really seem like the type. So in search of something I can remove from the bookshelf to make room for a hardcover Commedia with the Doré illustrations, and faced with a choice between Birk’s show more Paradiso and Purgatorio (I had only two volumes) this must go. Birk’s vision of Heaven is extremely gritty, replete with graffiti and traffic, but when he depicts the assembly of the Blessed set in the heart of Mecca, it’s rather transcendent. For that, I’ll miss it. show less
A modern vernacular adaptation of the Divine Comedy in three volumes. The best part of these is the art, by far; gorgeous line drawings in the style of Gustav Dore engravings, but entirely in a modern setting. Sometimes they work as illustrations for the poem, sometimes they're too ironic for their own good. (I liked the illustrations in the Paradiso best, though; there's something moving about Paradise set in a modern city, populated entirely by normal-looking modern people.)
The adapters show more have used almost painfully casual language for the text, which works in getting across the impact of Dante writing in Italian instead of Latin, but I do think they've made the worst possible choices for it -- if you're going to update the language and the metaphors, why not update all the Yelling About Politics sections so that they mean something to a modern audience? A few contemporary names scattered in amongst the sinners really doesn't cut it. And with no poetry to speak of (they haven't bothered trying to capture even the rhyme scheme, which seems like a lost opportunity for a hip-hop Commedia) there's absolutely nothing of interest in at least 50% of the thing. show less
The adapters show more have used almost painfully casual language for the text, which works in getting across the impact of Dante writing in Italian instead of Latin, but I do think they've made the worst possible choices for it -- if you're going to update the language and the metaphors, why not update all the Yelling About Politics sections so that they mean something to a modern audience? A few contemporary names scattered in amongst the sinners really doesn't cut it. And with no poetry to speak of (they haven't bothered trying to capture even the rhyme scheme, which seems like a lost opportunity for a hip-hop Commedia) there's absolutely nothing of interest in at least 50% of the thing. show less
I had a collected copy of The Divine Comedy which I gave up for these three volumes. Purgatorio was quite well done. I felt that it lived up to the translation that I read, and surpassed it in some ways. With the addition of contemporary pop-culture references throughout, we have a Hell in a very faithful to the original work. I definitely recommend these books to anyone who’s interested in The Divine Comedy.
This was the highlight of AP Senior English! Dante is THE author of ALLTIME! Inferno is probably the strongest in the trilogy; its vivid imagery I will never forget. A harrowing (and very creepy!) story. Every teacher should read this!!
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 617
- Popularity
- #40,746
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 13













