“To the great relief of anyone who enjoys him, Mr. New York Times reviewer Janet Maslin said the novel has a shaky opening that appears to put Brown’s “brainiac franchise” in trouble, but recovers swiftly. Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon returns in this latest sequel to the blockbuster book and film franchise to follow a trail of clues about 14th century Italian poet Dante Alighieri across Florence, Venice and Istanbul in a race to save the world from a deadly artificial plague. author for passages they said were more suited to a Hollywood film script than a novel. REUTERS/Alessandro GarofaloĬritics said the dark mysteries, mind-bending codes and history-laced tourism in “Inferno” will thrill Brown devotees, but panned the U.S. writer Dan Brown arrives at La Scala opera house in Milan December 7, 2009.
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