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Andrew Davidson, The Gargoyle (2008)
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Andrew Davidson, The Gargoyle (2008)

“Seeing the angel wings on Marianne’s bare back, the burn victim starts to melt. He also likes Marianne’s captivating conversational style. (‘For now, may I tell you a story about a dragon?’) He wonders if, how and why she is crazy. He finds a reassuring internal consistency to the string of lovelorn fairy tales she tells him, and to the 14th-century biography she claims is her own. He finds it fitting that she wants to take a badly burned man on a guided tour of Dante’s circles of hell. . . Although The Gargoyle is defiantly uncategorizable, Doubleday is hard at work taming it. (Suggested question for book club group discussions: ‘What sort of tailor-made suffering might Dante have invented for you?’).”    –Janet Maslin, “Beyond Fiery Gates, All that Inferno Allows” The New York Times (July 31, 2008)

Sighting Citation:

“Andrew Davidson, The Gargoyle (2008).” Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante’s Works in Contemporary Culture. Elizabeth Coggeshall and Arielle Saiber, eds. August 2, 2008. https://www.dantetoday.org/sightings/andrew-davidson-the-gargoyle-2008/.