Crisis: Book Review of Inferno

Dan Brown’s masterpiece

Rahul Bhadani
Social Jogi

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Picture Courtesy: https://danbrown.com/inferno/. The author of this article doesn’t claim copyright for images presented here.

Recently, I felt I was missing Dan Brown’s Inferno that I had completed recently.

Crisis, WHO, world population, Florence, Venice, Istanbul … no I am missing a vital lexicon: Dante! The work of Dan brown is impeccable in the sense that through Inferno, he has entangled various burning issues on the pillar of the exponentially growing human population. Every other day we see on news channels, read in newspapers and blogs about saving mother nature. The question is do we really need to save mother Nature or it is we who are needed to be saved. Don’t debate on what could be the answer to this question. The answer is obvious.

On the very first account, Inferno will look like a supernatural thriller, then soon it will force you to take it as a simple thriller but it is more contemporary, more vivid, and even more critical in terms of handling issues the Author has raised. The best part is that story is built on a plot of something that we have forgotten, something that seems irrelevant in the current scenario and that is the point. We still can look back into the past and remold our policy and our strategies to deal with the catastrophic situation the world is facing. Anti-protagonist Bertrand Zobrist is shown to have used Dante’s inferno as the tool to warn the world of possible extinction of the human…

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Rahul Bhadani
Social Jogi

Asst. Professor, @UAH | @uarizona PhD, ECE | Intelligent Transportation & Quantum Science Researcher | Donation: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/rahulbhadani