Two friends with different personalities find the hidden secrets to the world. Dante and Aristotle face many obstacles throughout their journey. Moving, falling in love, and realization is the key points in this story. This book feels like it could be a real world problem. Every crush is different it doesn't matter the race or sexuality. Dante has an interest in a guy at the start, then starts to fall in love. Both guys had to suffer in different ways some less harmful than others. Car accidents and all, everything always comes back how it was originated. Lies go very far if you start to make them believable. Aristotle Mendoza is the main character in the story his nickname is Ari. First, he had a crush on a girl Ileana, but she decides to get away from him. Aristotle is caring, considerate, and understanding with others around him. Dante Quintana is the second main character he's Ari’s best friend ( the popular one ). Dante’s the social, better-looking, and street smart guy which could come in handy. Bernardo Mendoza is Aristotle’s older brother. He was a very complicated past all I can say is it's interesting unfolding his life. His parents treated him like he was dead in front of Aristotle. By not talking about him, trying to change the conversation. …show more content…
The pros and cons in this story is that of course it's fiction.
All of the background history is so abundance, fascinating, the mystery behind it all. Lots of love and hate relationship, with a bunch of feelings. There is lots of sense of humor for all ages. I don't like the way they over exaggerate Dante’s character like a hero. The biggest con is that the characters try to let on another down softly. Try to spare someone's feelings and not having them dislike
them. There is a sequel to this book it's called, “There Will Be Other Summers”. It's a summary of this book, but the story continues. There never was a book that I've read without making a reference with another book, but this one changed me. It's explains the problems you might be experiencing. It may affect you by realizing your sexuality, and/or tells you the real problems in life through a book. Overall, this book was amazing it made my top 10 list for sure. I would read it if it was about mystery, love, and real life and yes this book has it all. It's a tender, honest exploration of identity and sexuality, and a passionate reminder that love should be open, free, and without shame. The author treats his characters with patience, giving them space and time to find their own little bubble in the world, and to find each other. Let's just say the ending was satisfying.
Dante write one of the masterpiece of the literature, a book that even third fourths of a century later people still reading but behind dark lines like as “Through me you enter into the city of woes, Through me you enter into the eternal pain, Through me you enter the population of loss” (Dante 19.1-3) must exist a reason or a purpose to write these lines. Dante born in 1265 in the cradle of Florence. In his childhood only two things happen that has transcendental for his work in literature, her mother died in 1272 (when Dante had 7 years old). Also, in may 1 of 1974 he meets Beatrice when he was nine years and her eight years and Dante instantly falls in love with her. “She began in a soft angelic voice”(Dante 13.47), this type of word Dante
The story itself was quite interesting. The characters are believable and some had obvious arcs, the plot seems well paced, and most plot points are memorable. The dialogue didn’t seem forced, and flowed fairly realistically. The conflict, Devine Corporations vs the Beanfield (well, really, it’s owner but…), ended well, with Devine not being able to do anything about it, not for a lack of trying.
Fans of the novel found that the way the novel is written, you never want to put it down and the action keeps things moving and is quite entertaining. The novel pulls you in and makes you love each of the main characters in it. This is a great series for anyone to read, and it is audience friendly for whoever reads them. There is quite a bit of suspense that will make the novel exceed readers 's expectations, and the twists and turns keeps you guessing and lets nothing be predictable. Some like the way this group of people bands together when they really need to and keep things together so they can all stop the
I enjoyed the book and I tought it was easy to read and understand. The constant adversities Andreas faced keep me craving more, from the prison scene to him being kidnapped left me wondering what would happen for the next chapter. I also enjoyed learning about the Jewish culture and traditions that the book mentioned, and having a new take on arguments regarding the practice of the Sabbath or how Jesus’s teachings could have sounded to a Gentile back in the day. Overall a fun and interesting book to read and challenged by views on the humanity of Jesus.
In this book, The Count of Monte Cristo, many readers find the use of honesty in the novel to be problematic. The Count of Monte Cristo or in other words Dantes, is dishonest by lying to everyone about who he is. Because he was in prison for such a long time, his looks changed and when he got out no one knew who he was.
Dante, an Italian poet during the late middle ages, successfully parallels courtly love with Platonic love in both the La Vita Nuova and the Divine Comedy. Though following the common characteristics of a courtly love, Dante attempts to promote love by elevating it through the lenses of difference levels. Through his love affair with Beatrice, although Beatrice has died, he remains his love and prompts a state of godly love in Paradiso. Dante, aiming to promote the most ideal type of love, criticizes common lust while praises the godly love by comparing his state of mind before and after Beatrice’s death. PJ Klemp essay “Layers of love in Dante’s Vita Nuova” explains the origins of Dante’s love in Plato and Aristotle themes that designate
Imagine you and your best friend processing your relationship to the point where both of you love each other. Seems normal? The love transforms. Now one of you wants to kiss the other. In Benjamin Alire Sáenz’s novel Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, two teenage boys become best friends after a couple of days. As time passed, Dante desired to kiss Ari and they do which directly connects to their homosexual love that Sáenz depicts with tennis shoes. Throughout the book, tennis shoes display Ari and Dante’s homosexual love for one another by revealing them as characters who refuse to value shoes.
In Dante’s Inferno, the relationship between Dante the Pilgrim and Virgil the Guide is an ever-evolving one. By analyzing the transformation of this relationship as the two sojourn through the circles of hell, one is able to learn more about the mindset of Dante the Poet. At the outset, Dante is clearly subservient to Virgil, whom he holds in high esteem for his literary genius. However, as the work progresses, Virgil facilitates Dante’s spiritual enlightenment, so that by the end, Dante has ascended to Virgil’s spiritual level and has in many respects surpassed him. In Dante’s journey with respect to Virgil, one can see man’s spiritual journey towards understanding God. While God loves man regardless of his faults, His greatest desire is to see man attain greater spirituality, in that man, already created in God’s image, may truly become divine, and in doing so, attain eternality.
In the Inferno we follow the journey of Dante as he wanders off the path of moral truth and into Hell. The Virgin Mary and Santa Lucia ask Beatrice, Dante’s deceased love, to send some help. Thus, Virgil comes to the rescue and essentially guides Dante through Hell and back to the mortal world from which he came. However, things begin to seem kind of odd. When reading the Inferno one may begin to question the way Dante describes Hell and the things that occur within, or even the things we have always believed about Hell. Despite the way it is described and well known in western civilization, Hell is not at all how we expect it to be because of Dante's use of irony throughout this poetic masterpiece.
“If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading or do things worth writing.” This maxim applies to the poet Dante Alighieri, writer of The Inferno in the 1300s, because it asserts the need to establish oneself as a contributor to society. Indeed, Dante’s work contributes much to Renaissance Italy as his work is the first of its scope and size to be written in the vernacular. Due to its readability and availability, The Inferno is a nationalistic symbol. With this widespread availability also comes a certain social responsibility; even though Dante’s audience would have been familiar with the religious dogma, he assumes the didactic role of illustrating his own version of Christian justice and emphasizes the need for a personal understanding of divine wisdom and contrapasso, the idea of the perfect punishment for the crime. Dante acts as both author and narrator, completing a physical and spiritual journey into the underworld with Virgil as his guide and mentor. The journey from darkness into light is an allegory full of symbolism, much like that of Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, which shows a philosopher’s journey towards truth. Therefore, Dante would also agree with the maxim, “Wise men learn by others’ harms; fools scarcely by their own,” because on the road to gaining knowledge and spiritual enlightenment, characters who learn valuable lessons from the misfortunes of others strengthen their own paradigms. Nonetheless, the only true way to gain knowledge is to experience it first hand. Dante’s character finds truth by way of his own personal quest.
Alighieri, Dante. The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri: Inferno. Trans. Allen Mandelbaum. Notes Allen Mandelbaum and Gabriel Marruzzo. New York: Bantam Books, 1980
	Edmond Dantes imprisonment made a huge impact on his life. He spent 14 years in the dark and quiet Chateau d’If. During those 14 years he met a priest, Abbe Faria, which they met each other through a secret tunnel in which they both have created while in prison. An amazing transformation takes place in Edmond Dantes as he learns about his enemies and a large hidden treasure that contains a large sum of money. Abbe Faria is a very smart man, while in prison he taught Dantes many useful knowledge including the whereabouts of a large treasure located on the Isle of Monte Cristo.
The story starts out with Edmond Dantes, a nineteen year old boy who started out his career early and well, as he was about to take command over his own ship, but out of jealousy, his comrades betrayed him and charged him with treason. About to be proven innocent, he admits to these charges and includes the name of the judge’s father, and from fear, sentenced Edmond to a lifelong penalty in prison to protect his father. He is then thrown into a high security prison where he is meant to spend the rest of his life. With Dantes out of the way, the conspirators were able to take over his ship, lands and steal his love from him. Thrown into the depths of despair and having tasted the greatest sadness of life, Dantes desires to reunite with his beautiful Mercedes, grieves for himself and all his lost possessions, and attempts to take his own life by starving himself to death.
"Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom" -Aristotle. In Dante's Inferno, the author exemplifies the meaning of this quote, as he and Virgil spiral downward into the 9 layers of hell to realize Dante’s own self. On the two poets’ journey they witness the brutal punishments that past lives that have sinned must undergo. In seeing the pain and punishment of these souls, some of them people he once knew, accompanied with Virgil’s guidance and words; Dante goes from being squeamish and hypersensitive to a more collected and steady individual. In reality, Dante Alghieri was born to a family of politicians in Florence, Italy 1265. He grew up in love with Beatrice Portinari, though he was married to Gemma Donati. Ironically he was eventually exiled from Florence by a relative of his wife. In this exile, Dante wrote some of his most famous works including The Divine Comedy: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradisio, which were largely influenced by his love for Beatrice. These works are considered some of the greatest Italian writings. He eventually died in 1321. Just as fictional Dante found himself through his experience in hell in Inferno with Virgil’s and his friends’ above help, the journey of self-discovery serves a universal role in everyone's lives appearing in it's own unique way, and never without guidance.
In Leonardo da Vinci's paintings there are clues that reveal hidden messages. At first glance, his paintings may seem just like normal paintings, but at second glance they are not that simple. For example, Mona Lisa has captivated humanity for centuries because of her smile and her mysterious identity and the small details in The Last Supper have posed questions about what they mean. Leonardo da Vinci attracts me because through his art he may reveal to us some hidden truths about the past and also because he knows the identity of the women in The Mona Lisa.