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Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - The Dante Club: A Novel

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List Price: $7.99
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Manufacturer: Ballantine Books
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Mass Market Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780345490384 ISBN: 034549038X Label: Ballantine Books Manufacturer: Ballantine Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 464 Publication Date: 2006-06-27 Publisher: Ballantine Books Release Date: 2006-06-27 Studio: Ballantine Books
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Editorial Reviews:
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The New York Times Bestseller
Boston, 1865. A series of murders, all of them inspired by scenes in Dante’s Inferno. Only an elite group of America’s first Dante scholars—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, and J. T. Fields—can solve the mystery. With the police baffled, more lives endangered, and Dante’s literary future at stake, the Dante Club must shed its sheltered literary existence and find the killer.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Writing style is very tedious! Comment: We chose this book for our neighborhood Book Group. Of the 12 members, only three of us were even able to finish it. Very hard to get in to, most gave up before page 100. But, even those of us who keep going found it very plodding and tedious. A good plot, but, his writing style definitely got in the way of the story.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Spectacular Mystery Comment: Three unlikely sleuths, the real-life poets Lowell, Holmes, and Longfellow, investigate a series of brilliant murders inspired by Dante's Inferno, which is at the present of the story being translated to English by Longfellow himself So this means the murderer is amongst them somehow. A sheer work of brilliance set in post-Civil War times making for one fantastically enjoyable read. Highly recommended for all detective thriller fans.
Customer Rating:      Summary: So-so murder mystery Comment: No spoilers
The Dante Club is basically the definition of a so-so murder mystery. Basically, the foremost experts in the study of Dante's Divine Comedy work together to try to stop a murder who punishes his victims in real life, the same way Dante punishes sinners in his poem. The problem with this book is that it does absolutely nothing to stand out from any other murder mystery. While reading this, I found myself reading just for the sake of getting to the end, and not because I really cared about any of the characters, what happened to them, or who the killer was and why he was doing what he was doing. Although I can't say that I was actually bored at any point in this reading, I can say that I just wasn't particularly interested either.
The bottom line is that this book can be skipped over. Furthermore, if you like the premise of this book (Dante's poem being invoked for murder and using it to figure clues out) I HIGHLY recommend The Last Cato by Matilde Asensi. You can check out my review of it for more details, but think how Dan Brown used da Vinci's works to get clues behind something major, and that's what Asensi does with Dante. It's one of my favorite books of the genre, and I suggest checking it out over The Dante Club anyday.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Poet's step is quiet and solemn Comment: Matthew Pearl's 'The Dante Club' is an enthralling and entertaining piece of literature. Set in nineteenth century Boston, readers are immediately introduced to such famous literary figures as Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and George Washington Greene. Readers are also introduced to murder most foul as one of their contemporaries is found on his own property, stripped bare, with a fatal head wound, and a black flag marking the spot where he lay as the very life seeped from his body.
The celebrated poets/historians who are the protagonists of this work busy themselves with a weekly meeting of their 'Dante Club' as Longfellow works to complete the first American translation of Dante's 'Divine Comedy'. As bodies beging to pile up around them, the men discover that the murderer, their 'Lucifer', patterns his kills after the words of Dante himself in the Divine Comedy. Once this is realized, the men know that they must work to unmask the killer before he strikes again. But as they investigate the work of this fiend, they discover that, somehow, he is always one step ahead of them.....committing another murder in the style of the Dante Canto they intend to work on at their next meeting of the Dante Club.
Full of historical detail and period manners, author Matthew Pearl certainly earned his keep in presenting a thrilling, well paced and plotted novel that brings to life not only some of the most famous literary minds of nineteenth century Boston, but their surroundings and daily lives as well. Pearl has crafted a dark, sinister tale of murder and mystery to ensnare readers as much as it ensnared the men investigating the crime.
Not to be passed up by readers who truly enjoy well-written historical mysteries and dark tales of even darker deeds. A fantastic find, and a work that I will most definitely recommend to others.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Not great but not terrible Comment: This is the author's first novel and it shows. He's a little too impressed with himself and that shows too, making it hard to take the narrative seriously at times. The murders were horrifyingly disgusting which is good or bad depending on your tastes (I liked it). This is a hard book to get into but it is fairly entertaining if you're not expecting too much. Coincidences abound. The solution made me think, "Wait, what? Really? That person? Well alright. I guess I can go with that." If you have a long commute it's good for passing the time. I basically enjoyed it once I put all the rave reviews out of my head.
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