Ron Howard’s “Inferno” is a follow-up to “The Da Vinci Code” (2006) and “Angels & Demons” (2009). Famous symbologist Robert...
F YOU can’t wait to see the much talked about movies based on books on the big screen, leaf through...
If 2015 was a great year for pop culture (hello, “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”!), 2016 will be no slouch either. Here are the...
Manila raised a furor recently over Dan Brown’s best-selling novel “Inferno.” The novel follows the adventures of fictional art historian Robert Langdon.
It started in November last year, when I called my grandma while standing in the middle of National Book Store’s Shangri-La Mall branch. “La, I’m at National. Are there any books you want from here?”
Like any would-be symbologists, readers encountering the cover of Dan Brown’s newest novel “Inferno: A Novel” (Doubleday, New York, 2013, 463 pages) for the first time should examine its elements.