Inferno Review
Inferno review by Harriet Klausner
Renowned popular science-fiction writer Allen Carpentier makes a bet with his
fans at a Los Angeles convention. Right out of War and Peace, he sits on the
windowsill of a room on the hotel’s eighth floor drinking a bottle of rum. About
half way through he gags and falls out the window to his death.
When Allen lands after what seems like eternity to him, he is shocked that he
can think though somehow he finds himself in some sort of brass bottle that he
wonders if it is his coffin. Some big Italian who says to call him Benito frees
him from his bottle prison and agrees to be his guide as Allen treks through the
concentric circles of Hell.
This is more than a reprint of the 1976 homage to Dante as Larry Niven and
Jerry Pournelle apparently revised some of the journey to “set the stage” for a
sequel next year. Accompanying Allen and Benito on the trek is fun as they meet
an assortment of sinners through the circles. Obviously still filled with
adulation of Dante, INFERNO is a modern day faster and hipper version.
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