The Dante Club

by Matthew Pearl | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 074351792x Global Overview for this book
Registered by k00kaburra of San Jose, California USA on 11/18/2009
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1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Rec'd via Paperbackswap.com.
Abridged, 5 CDs.

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From Publishers Weekly
Talk about high concept: in Pearl's debut novel, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes and James Russell Lowell team up with 19th-century publisher J.T. Fields to catch a serial killer in post-Civil War Boston. It's the fall of 1865, and Harvard University, the cradle of Bostonian intellectual life, is overrun by sanctimonious scholars who turn up their noses at European literature, confining their study to Greek and Latin. Longfellow and his iconoclastic crew decide to produce the first major American translation of Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. Their ambitious plans are put on hold when they realize that a murderer terrorizing Boston is recreating some of the most vivid scenes of chthonic torment in Dante's Inferno. Since knowledge of the epic is limited to rarefied circles in 19th-century America, the "Dante Club" decides the best way to clear their own names is to match wits with the killer. The resulting chase takes them through the corridors of Harvard, the grimy docks of Boston Harbor and the subterranean labyrinths of the metropolis. It also gives Pearl an excellent opportunity to demonstrate that he's done his history homework. The detective story is well plotted, and Pearl's recreation of the contentious world of mid-19th-century academia is engrossing, even though some of its more ambitious elements like an examination of intellectual hypocrisy and insularity in the Ivy League are somewhat clunky. There are, as well, some awkward attempts to replicate 19th-century prose ("But for Holmes the triumph of the club was its union of interests of that group of friends whom he felt most fortunate to have"). Still, this is an ambitious and often entertaining thriller that may remind readers of Caleb Carr.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Journal Entry 2 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Saturday, December 26, 2009
Started listening to this book on the 24th while I was doing chores.

Journal Entry 3 by k00kaburra from San Jose, California USA on Friday, January 8, 2010
Finished the book today.

It's an interesting read. I enjoyed the book, and I'm usually not much of a thriller/mystery genre fan. The characters are all fairly static and lacking in personality, but maybe Pearl wasn't comfortable casting traits onto 'real' people. Since the murders being investigated are based on punishments from Dante's Inferno the descriptions were quite graphic and disgusting. Men being eaten alive over several days by maggots, for example. Eeew.

The book had a bit of a pacing problem. Certain passages would really drag while others were OK. The attempts to imitate the language of the 19th century didn't always succeed, and the overly complex prose could be quite awkward. But overall it was enjoyable enough that I'm considering getting another of Pearl's books on audio CD.

Journal Entry 4 by k00kaburra at PaperBackSwap.com, A book trading site -- Controlled Releases on Thursday, April 8, 2010

Released 14 yrs ago (4/8/2010 UTC) at PaperBackSwap.com, A book trading site -- Controlled Releases

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sent to Carmen Dominguez of Miami, FL to fulfill a request on Paperbackswap.com!

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