Dante For Beginners takes the reader on a trip starting in hell and ending in heaven. The reader gets a quick introduction to Dante and his times. Next, the reader meets a sweet lass named Beatrice and samples a bit of his other literary offerings, such as the great feast, the Convivio. But then it's on to the big one, the Commedia, and a canto by canto description of the entire work. Characters, ideas and situations are described as they happen--no searching through end notes, footnotes or field notes to distinguish Forese Donati, Dante's pal, from his evil brother, Corso. The entire plan of the hereafter is simply mapped out. Dante For Beginners is a great vacation with history's greatest tourist, Dante Alighieri.
My Litsy review : "More Dante prep, easier reading this time. 🙂 (It‘s kind of like schmoop with illustrations)
These books are actually helpful to me, but not much more to add to that above.
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50. Dante for Beginners by Joe Lee published: 2011 format: 180 page paperback. Not a graphic novel, but heavily illustrated acquired: Library read: Oct 12-14 time reading: 3 hr 46 min, 1.3 min/page rating: 3
More fun than the cliff notes. Good Illustrations. Useful to read ahead a few cantos here, so that the reader can focus on the poem itself instead of worrying about teasing out the meaning. Recommended.
OK, I get it; having a comic relief here and there in an introductory book on a classical text may be a good thing. But trying to be funny in every sentence, the author neglects the main task: giving a good, concise introduction to a difficult text full of historical and theological references.,
I got it because I wanted to find out a little more about The Divine Comedy. I had only read the inferno. But I find that Lee's breezy irreverent style really doesn't lend itself to the material.