![]() ![]() ![]() The reason why I believe Inferno was such a successful Dan Brown novel is because it veered far from the others, avoiding the format we’ve come to expect from a Robert Langdon novel. Zobrist is well-known for his teachings against overpopulation, so it makes sense he would create a plague that would wipe out the population. ![]() He knows that whatever reason he’s in Italy, it must have something to do with this map. Over the course of the novel, he discovers that he has been brought to Italy by the World Health Organization to solve a puzzle, whose answer indicates the location of some kind of virus or plague created by a billionaire geneticist named Bertrand Zobrist. In the latest adventure, Langdon teams up with his nurse, Sienna Brooks, and finds a projector in one of his pockets that displays Botticell’s Map of Hell. So begins Inferno, the latest and easily one of the best of Dan Brown’s bestsellers conspiracy thriller novels that have been captivating readers since The Da Vinci Code was released. He has been shot, doesn’t realize that he’s in Florence, Italy - and not Boston, Massachusetts - and doesn’t remember anything that’s happened in the last 48 hours. **Note: This post does include spoilers about both the novel and movie versions of Inferno.
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