Dantes' Inferno
β Scribed by Lovett, Sarah
- Book ID
- 109141033
- Publisher
- Simon & Schuster
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Series
- Dr. Sylvia Strange 4
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 0671026461
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The author of the critically acclaimed novels Dangerous Attachments and Acquired Motives is back with another spellbindingly original thriller featuring forensic psychiatrist Sylvia Strange. Now, in Dantes' Inferno, Sylvia is called to Los Angeles from her New Mexico home when a massive explosion blasts through the J. Paul Getty Museum, endangering children on a field trip and claiming two lives. The police peg notorious bomber John Dantes as the mastermind, even though he's in a maximum-security prison, serving a life sentence for another bombing he claims he didn't commit.
Dr. Strange, a genius at accessing the most tortured psychiatric cases, is called in to evaluate Dantes. The prisoner is said to be unreachable -- and renowned for psychologically terrorizing his every visitor. But Dr. Strange forms a sudden, and unsettling, connection with Dantes. There's something about the enigmatic loner and his obsession with Los Angeles that both confounds and...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Cover; Title Page; Dedication; Acknowledgements; Contents; CANTO I; CANTO II; CANTO III; CANTO IV; CANTO V; CANTO VI; CANTO VII; CANTO VIII; CANTO IX; CANTO X; CANTO XI; CANTO XII; CANTO XIII; CANTO XIV; CANTO XV; CANTO XVI; CANTO XVII; CANTO XVIII; CANTO XIX; CANTO XX; CANTO XXI; CANTO XXII; CANTO
No ano de 1.300, Dante Alighieri, o poeta florentino, viaja atΓ© o inferno na companhia do poeta latino VirgΓlio, para conhecer o destino das almas que pecaram em vida. CoincidΓͺncia ou nΓ£o, sete sΓ©culos depois, apΓ³s perder tragicamente Beatriz, sua amada, um jovem chamado Dante segue atravΓ©s das tr
Following his irreverent Oulipian reworking of Shakespeare's Sonnets, in his new book Philip Terry takes on Dante's Inferno, shifting the action from the twelfth century to the present day and relocating it to the modern 'walled city' of the University of Essex. Dante's Phlegethon becomes the river