Average customer rating:
- Very well written
- A bit disappointed
- Craving for something more
- now I'm waiting for the sequal to Gehenna.. wait a sec...
- Interesting, but flawed
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Gehenna, the Final Night: The Final Night (Vampire the Masquerade)
Ari Marmell
Manufacturer: World of Darkness
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Horror | Genre Fiction | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1588468550 |
Customer Reviews:
Very well written.......2005-07-08
First things first, this is my first exposure to Vampire: the Masquerade (VtM), so if you don't want a noob's opinion skip this review. On the other hand I've been reading fantasy for about 15 years; I just happened to see this particular book in a used book store and grabbed it. In a way I'm sorry since it's basically the beginning of a re-birth of the VtM world, and I never experienced that world before this (plus now I know the fate of many characters whom I suspect are regulars in the world).
At any rate, this book was surprisingly well written. I'm a bit of a snob when it comes to bad writing, but Marmell was able to weave a tale that kept me truly interested. The main character (Beckett) was a sort of morally grey character that I genuinely liked. None of the characters were over the top, the dialogue flowed, I was never left wondering what in the nine hells the author was talking about - in short, this book avoided all of the major problems I've run into in other similar books. The plot was fast-paced and jumped around a lot, but the layout of the book made it fluid and easy to follow.
All in all I really enjoyed this book and can't think of anything bad to say about it (which is in itself a testament to its quality). I simply wish I had read some other stuff in the VtM world first.
A bit disappointed.......2005-02-10
I just finished reading Gehenna. This is the first Vampire novel I've actually read. Having read as much as I can about the metaplot from the roleplaying books, I was a bit disappointed in the ending.
Like a previous reviewer, I wanted more questions answered. I wanted concrete answers to all of the "myths" about kindred society.
That doesn't take away from the fact the author, in my opinion, did a great job with writing the novel. The descriptions he used, especially describing the beast and how it reacted to stressful situations, was great.
Craving for something more.......2005-01-18
I bought this book because I wanted to know how this great series ended. Was I disappointed? A tab bit. There were several prominent figures from pervious novels that weren't even mention like Aisling Sturbridge, Isabel Giovanni, or Khalil. There's no written note, e-mail, or confession. Guess we have to make them up ourselves.
If you want, buy the book for some easy reading but don't expect much. This book was suppose to coincide w/ the storyline on the recently release game Bloodlines, especially concerning the Anarch Smiling Jack.
now I'm waiting for the sequal to Gehenna.. wait a sec..........2005-01-17
I have been a long time fan of the V:TM plotline, mainly game focused material but books as well. I was hoping this "finale" would answer my questions, provide details, uncover secrets, maybe even show a man-behind-the-curtain and basically wrap-up the world of darkness vampire plotline as I knew it. Although the writer does a very good job of outlining the cause and effects within the game itself, he dodges all the major storyline meat I wanted to chew. I wanted to read a book with some answers, and at the end of the book I felt very much like the main character did, which is that the answers aren't going to come. I feel I wasted my time reading this book; it is written well, I will give it that much credit. BUT. If you are looking for the climax of Gehenna, battles between elders, devastating mystery powers, mythic figures, ancient secrets revealed, basic kerblaam stuff, and the rest of that epic carp, look further. I can say that near the end of the book, I kept checking how many pages I had yet to read as there were too many questions and plotlines left unanswered and untouched. Now, I guess its time to start waiting for Gehenna: The Next Final Night. Or maybe Gehenna: Final Night #XVI: Caine Vs. Himself...
Interesting, but flawed.......2004-04-30
This was only the 2nd WOD novel I've read. I've played the game a few times, but am not a fan of Role-playing. The world itself is interesting, though, and so I bought this book.
It was good, but could have used a little tighter editing. Also, a lot of characters were introduced, and I think most of them have been around a while. This might be good for people who've followed the whole series, but it made it hard to figure out motivations we (it seemed) were assumed to already know.
I'd say this is worth reading if you want to know how it all ends (for now) and you might like it more if you know who all the characters are.
Average customer rating:
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Forty Thousand in Gehenna
C. J. Cherryh
Manufacturer: Nelson Doubleday
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000NRAPSW |
Average customer rating:
- Un
- Complex and fascinating
- Fantastic colonization story - Classic Cherryh
- Simply delicious.
- Another fantastic Cherryh Classic
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Forty Thousand in Gehenna (Alliance-Union Universe)
C. J. Cherryh
Manufacturer: DAW
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Cherryh, C.J. | ( C ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0886774292 |
Download Description
A few years after the truce between the Union and the Alliance factions, Union lands a new settlement on the world called Gehenna, a colony consisting of 41,911 "non-citizen" clones and several hundred natural born men as supervisors. Gehenna seemed to have no intelligent native life-and therein lay the mistake. Calibans, dragon-like beasts, had a different sort of intelligence; and, as time passed, they began to twist the minds of the new generations to their own inhuman rhythms of life. Abandoned as a colony, life on Gehenna assumed stranger and stranger forms-until the day that Alliance spies arrived and applied the match to the many social explosives that had been piling up.
Customer Reviews:
Un.......2006-11-17
There's really not much good to say about this book. I want to say the concept was good, but the concept is so underdeveloped I'm not sure what it is. I thought it was about a unique relationship between alien dragons and humans- but we never really learn how this occurs. Just as a character or relationship gets interesting, we jump 100 years into a future where the characters are nearly forgotten. Perhaps the story is supposed to show a huge arc of time, something like A Canticle for Leibowitz. But Cherryh doesn't have the mythic abilities of Walter Miller. A large section of the book is taken up with an anthropologist doing everything one shouldn't in the field. There are repeated instances of rape and gang rape that are softly supported within the universe of the book. Believe me, I'm racking my brain to come up with positive things to say. I had to repeatedly press page down quickly and skim through many sections of the book, as the plot was simply so repetitive and unnuanced. I hoped for a glorious redemptive resolution. No such promise was fulfilled.
This review refers to the electronic edition.
Complex and fascinating.......2006-10-02
Another really good novel in the universe of Downbelow Station. What would happen if a colony composed of 'true' humans and 'azi'(who are both more than and less than clones of humans) was dumped on an out of the way world in the middle of an inter-galactic war and abandoned. The azi are given a directive about the humans, but with time the drift in the society creates a different mix that is accelerated by the 'dragons' of Gehenna. Want to know what the political fall-out is when the colony is discovered? Read Cyteen. You'll also find out the full reasoning behind the colony in Cyteen. Don't get me wrong; this is a stand alone novel and a darn good one.
Fantastic colonization story - Classic Cherryh.......2004-11-05
"Forty Thousand In Gehenna" is the story of a newly colonized Union planet. There is a twist on the standard colonization theme: the initial population of the colony is a small group of about 450 Union officers who will get the colony set up, using about 40000 'azi'. Azi are cloned humans routinely used as workers or soldiers by Union, indoctrinated to obey authority unquestioningly (see also the brilliant novel "Cyteen"). The novel quickly changes from a colonization story to a chilling study of psychology when authority on the planet breaks down and the azi, for the first time in their lives, find themselves without any guidance. This is Cherryh at her best - gritty, down-to-earth SF, told in a very matter-of-fact, no-frills prose style, uncompromising but very rewarding. This is not the best entry point for the Union/Alliance series but one of the finest and most unique parts of it.
Simply delicious........2003-06-18
This book just gets better and better as you read it.
It starts somewhat slow, as most of Cherryh's books do. I would contend, however, that it only _seems_ slow as you begin to recognize the characters and the plot lines.
Cherryh leaves us with an incredibly complex book. The complexity of the book is not in the characters, nor in the plot itself. Rather, she has woven perhaps one of the most complex societies and man:man, man:environment conflicts I've ever read.
The continuing question throughout the book is debated by people removed from the situation (I won't go in to details for the sake of the prospective readers), and new details come to life as the story progresses.
What really makes this book a shining example of what a good author can do is Cherryh's creation, quite literally of the ground up, of a new race. A new society. And describing that race, and that society, at every step of the way. Not only does she create conflict and strong interactions between characters and groups of characters, but she creates a new morality, a new language, and indeed a new culture.
This book shows the talent of one of Science Fiction's most gifted authors. Highly, highly recommended. I buy this book for anyone who will read it.
Another fantastic Cherryh Classic.......2003-04-08
Cherryh is one of my favorite authors, so you'll need to temper my enthusiasm with that knowledge. I haven't ever read anything by her that I didn't like. And many many books (she's extremely prolific) that I absolutely loved. This is not one of her best - but it is very good. Combines science, genetics, sociology, psychology and great story telling.
The reason this isn't one of her best books is that it doesn't spend the kind of time with characters that it could. Her greatest strength is placing very real and complex characters into real and complex environments. But this book takes place over hundreds of years, and doesn't ever get deeply involved with any one or group of characters. So it doesn't shine like she typically does. But there is a greatness to this book and I recommend it to anyone who has read any Cherryh fiction. As a first exposure I'd stick to Downbelow Station, Finity's End, Merchanter's luck, or Cyteen.
Average customer rating:
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Hell is Real
Richard Walls
Manufacturer: Trafford Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Christian Living | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
General | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1412000602
Release Date: 2006-07-06 |
Book Description
This book presents a very real and vivid explanation of the reality of hell. A warfare against beliefs that are opposed in their teachings of this doctrine.
Customer Reviews:
Hell Is Real.......2007-07-12
This author is a quack and the information that he presents is just plain INACCURATE. Walls has a strong faith in God and Jesus, but no formal training in the historical or literary contexts of the Old Testament and New Testament passages that he quotes. He interprets Biblical words with today's meanings for the words. He claims that the Holy Spirit inspired him to write this book, implying that HIS words are actually the Holy Spirit's words -- which seems aimed at telling the reader that he is correct. Any real book editor would have demanded a thorough rewrite just to get Wall's ideas clear, his vocabulary appropriate, and his grammar correct. Wall's reasoning is circular.
The concept of Hell is actually never mentioned by Jesus. It was inserted into the Bible several centuries after Jesus' life. To imply that Jesus taught about a Hell to which our spirits go after death is simply WRONG. Jesus taught about a Hell-on-earth, which we create for ourselves when we fail to live in relationship with God and fail to treat others as God's valued children.
There are many books on the market regarding the concept of Hell which are written by Biblical scholars, have REAL information, and are much more worth your time and money.
Average customer rating:
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Vtes Gehenna Booster Pack
Manufacturer: White Wolf Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Role Playing & Fantasy | Puzzles & Games | Entertainment | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 1588466310 |
Average customer rating:
|
Forty Thousand in Gehenna
C.J. Cherryh
Manufacturer: Nelson Doubleday
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000MI5NHK |
Product Description
Issued by the Science Fiction Book Club.
Average customer rating:
- Vampires Kinderd
- Better then the original Clan Saga
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Clan Novel Saga: The Eye of Gehenna (Vampire, 2)
Stewart Wieck ,
Gherbod Fleming ,
Eric Griffin ,
Kathleen Ryan ,
Justin Achilli , and
Richard Dansky
Manufacturer: White Wolf Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Achilli, Justin | ( A ) | Authors, A-Z | Horror | Genre Fiction | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1588468461 |
Customer Reviews:
Vampires Kinderd .......2006-07-09
Every thing you want in a Vampire book where even the so called heros are not so nice
Better then the original Clan Saga.......2004-07-06
Let me start by saying I love the original WoD and VtM. I read the whole Clan Novel Series (the 14 original books) many times. This is better. Adding in information from other sources (The Book of Nod) and a bit new stuff that is fun as well. By far the best feture of this book (as well as its brothers Eye of Gehenna, Bloody September and End Games) is the way the editors pulled out the chapters of the original books, time stamped so you know when the chapter happens, and put them all together in chronilogical order (Spelling...sorry). Fall of Atlanta is a great opeining and a must read for people who want a feel for the revisions between Vampire the Masquerade 2nd Edition and the 2nd Edition Revised. The characters are the best I have ever read and it leaves you wanting so much more.
Average customer rating:
- Unholy Gutless Non-Ending!
- Try again WW
- Vampire: The Masquerade's amazing final bow
- Where Has White Wolf's Creativity Gone?
- The End...
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Gehenna
Dean Shomshak ,
Travis-Jason Feldstein ,
Christopher Kobar , and
Ari Marmell
Manufacturer: White Wolf Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General | Graphic Novels | Comics & Graphic Novels | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1588462463 |
Book Description
The End of the World...
The prophecies of Gehenna were true. The world teeters on the brink of an undead apocalypse, the night when the progenitors of the vampire race rise to consume their childer amid a rain of blood and fire. As the fated Armageddon for the Kindred arises, what can they do?
FOR THE DAMNED
Drawing the Vampire Line to a close, GEHENNA brings about the conclusion of Vampire's World of Darkness. Featuring a sliding scale which Storytellers can custom-tailer the events of The End to their own chronicles, this book places the final accounting for the curse of Cain in the hands of the players' characters. Part of the Time of Judgement series. Hardcover.
See also: Vampire: Gehenna, The Final Night (ISBN 1588468550).
Customer Reviews:
Unholy Gutless Non-Ending!.......2006-03-03
For those less familiar with Vampire: The Masquerade and other World of Darkness "1.0" settings, let me give you a hint as to why people either love or hate with undying loathing this whole Time of Judgement Series: Gehenna, Apocalypse, Ascention, and Time of Judgement:
For years now the guys at White Wolf have been doling out what they coined "metaplot" book by book (and in fact, in whole series--such as Exalted, which was about nothing so much as the far distant legendary fantasy genesis of the World of Darkness that overlays our modern age.) Piece by painstaking piece the developers would lay down a clue here, a hint there. There were apparently three primal forces in the universe, the Weaver, the Wyld, and the Wyrm--organization and stasis, insane fecundity, and entropic decay respectively. Somehow these powers fell out of alignment. Most scholars blame humanity. Suddenly stasis (the Weaver) was indominable, mankind and science were logging their discoveries in libraries that would last unchanging for generations. Cities were made from concrete and steel. Disease and old age were pushed further and further back. Without the turnover caused by destruction (the Wyrm) there was no outlet for new creative bursts (the Wyld). The fae creatures of the Wyld had to leave creation entirely or be consumed by order into dry, static, unmagical forms. The Wyrm went crazy, needing to undo all the carved in stone order of the world, mutating people into engines of destruction called formori. Werewolves, long those responsible for shepherding the three forces were now set against stagnant humanity on one side and the Wyrm's corruptive minions on the other--but were dying. Mages likewise were fighting their own war, Traditions kicking against the bars of stasis to allow more magic into the world, while the ancient and fascist Technocracy who have promoted order to "protect" and control the average unmagical mortal fought against them.
Set against this were two other stories, much odder and in contrast to the others--Demon and Vampire. Both of these stories suggest a creation centered universe without the three primal powers, but rather a judeo-christian god who created everything, and the Demons and Vampires respectively who rebelled for their own reasons and were cursed. Their games were the crawling back from the brink. They were beautiful tragedies of creatures hated by goodness, but trying to salvage what good was in them.
Every book revealed a sliver more of these great storylines, and what's more, moved ever closer to revealing who was right and who was mistaken--what secret lore had the greatest fragments of truth to them and what the final true picture of the world was to be.
A wonderful story that I was proud to be part of and longed desparately to see fulfilled.
Then tragedy insued. The developers chickened out. After all the interesting, compelling material they'd produced, they feared their audience would be furious if they were to finally know what had really been going on the whole time...so they copped out. They came out with a different book for each supernatural race, taking the end from their point of view. Not only that but the end was a choose your own adventure. No answers were given, just suggestions and gentle prods in certain directions. I was furious. So were others. It'd be like watching your favorite TV show and halfway through the last season they give alternate endings based on whatever you wanted to think happened. It was a mess. The integrity of the setting fell apart.
Then to make things worse, it turns out the whole thing was a ploy to create a new World of Darkness 2.0, with dumbed down mechanics and a mishmash of the same old ideas, but with books that look awfully like D20 books in their layout.
So that's why some people (like me) hate this whole line of books so much. The people who like them largely are the people who never much liked all the metaplot or didn't see the point of all the extra stuff getting in the way of their games.
So you make the call. It's not a 1-star because it's awful. It's a 1-star because it disappointed me, which in some ways may in fact be much worse.
Try again WW.......2005-09-14
I'd been running my players through my own Gehenna for years now. Imagine games that go on for 6+ hr's and it's counter move vs. counter move.
Imagine my surprise when I heard WW was releasing a Gehenna book. I'll be honest...I thought the book would lack depth, and be callow in it's "deconstruction" of the Final Night's of Cain's children.
So, I bought the book. I wasn't surprised by what I read. Many of the scenario's in the book are disappointing, and a few I found our right offensive because only Biblical lore was accounted for in the end of the world...such as the Wormwood scenario.
What of Kindred that existed outside the Christian timeline, when "God" didn't exist, but Gods' did? I found much of the book insulting and shallow when compared to ANY (especially the WtA book, which was amazing!) of the TOJ books...
In other words, don't buy this pile of steaming crap...
Vampire: The Masquerade's amazing final bow.......2004-04-03
Vampire is an amazing game, and Gehenna is an amazing book to end it's run with. The authors do not stick with just one, canonical way to end the series, they give you four different options and let you decide which one best suits your campaign. The four scenarios are all very different and fit very different campaign styles and groups. I can't see anyone buying this book and not finding something they could use in it. It's great.
Where Has White Wolf's Creativity Gone?.......2004-03-24
You start reading this book hoping for some of the strengths from earlier White Wolf publications (depth of story, well thought out ideas, etc.), but the book lacks depth. After reading through the introductory parts of the book before coming to the 4 possible scenarios, you start to figure out that White Wolf really did not have a well thought out plan for the end of the Vampire line. Why end the line to re-release it as d10 alternate? What's the point of ending this storyline when the ending wasn't well-thought out? But we will have Dark Ages.
And once you read through this book, which is tough, you come to a realization that you could have thought of a much better ending yourself.
The book is okay, but I do not think it's worth the cover price. The novel is awesome. Save your money and buy the novel!
Oh, I would have given this book two stars, but having more then one possible ending changed my mind.
The End..........2004-03-03
This book is the final book for Vampire: the Masquerade and covers Gehenna, the end of the world for all intents and purposes. A novel new concept, this book provides multiple scenarios which you can tailor to your needs based on your own needs and likes. No canon, no specifics. Just suggestions, and its a VERY cool concept.
The book starts out with a great piece of fiction using the characters from Cairo by Night, and then gives some general info about Gehenna with stuff like the Red Star, the shattering of the Black Hand and how the sects react. The whereabouts of the Antedilluvians are given (though some are rather disappointing, others are what we've expected all along), though these can be changed to suit your needs. Then the book gives a whole chapter on general setting info for Gehenna. The prophecies and Antedilluvians are examined, including others beyond the 13 "known" ones (though these may or may not just be rumors). Also info on the Inconnu, Jyhad and last daughters of eve, some news clippings from around the world showing how the mortal world is affected and the system for the withering, a new weakness afflicting Cainites in the Final Nights. Info on other supernaturals is largely avoided, but it is mentioned that depending on how it ends it could be a huge spectacle to a quiet bang unnoticed by the mortal world.
The next chapters detail four possible scenarios (which you can adapt for your own use), which I have no intentions of spoiling for you. The first, Wormwood, seems to be the most popular and has God himself taking out his wrath on all vampires. Fair is Foul, probably my favorite, involves Lilith taking her revenge on Caine and his childer amidst the struggles of the Antedilluvians. The next scenario, Nightshade, involves the awakening of the Antedilluvians and may be the "canon" ending to the metaplot from what I've heard on forums. And the final scenario, the Crucible of God, shows what happens when vampires openly take control of human society. And it has a REALLY funny ending if you like ironic justice....
The book closes out with some more stuff, including a Storyteller's guide to running games set in the end times, Stats and profiles for some of the characters presented (which were nice, but some are already presented elsewhere and I guess the space could have been better used in other ways), and finally a last look at Caine himself. Overall, this is a very useful and innovative book. Definately worth running any one of the scenarios presented. The book largely accepts the Caine mythos and Abrahamic religious beliefs (sorry for all those Setites, Laibon, Bahari, Einherjar, etc) BUT makes a big point on how you can change it if you choose. In fact, one of the scenarios includes the Lilith Mythos as I mentioned, which I think is cool. Still, the game is based of the Biblical kinslayer, and it makes sense that the Jewish/Christian/Muslim view of God holds in the game. Overall, just get the book. You and your players will enjoy it.
Average customer rating:
- Hell Moves With the Times
- Keep in mind the author, when reading...
- This Book Has One Great Start
- A Look in the Mirror
- A Look in the Mirror
|
Gehenna
Paul Thigpen
Manufacturer: Charisma House
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0884193241 |
Customer Reviews:
Hell Moves With the Times.......2007-08-02
Thigpen's "Gehenna" draws heavily from Dante's visions of Hell in his epic poem. However, as times on Earth have moved along somewhat, so has Hell. Items in Gehenna have modernised to roughly 20th Century equivalents. Beyond that, the vision is harrowing and thought-provoking.
Following the main character who follow's Dante on a "guided tour" of Gehenna, the book catalogues a number of woes and eternal torments that await the unrepentant. There are a good number of characters that are picked up along the way, but as the subtitle says, "The only way out is down". It seems that even in Gehenna, there are the odd administrative errors.
What is particularly notable about the novel, (and could easily have been something it fell into), is that it never goes overboard with the descriptions of the punishments. In some effort to shock the readers, Thigpen could have gone into graphic detail, but he remains remarkably restrained throughout. The impact comes from other factors, rather than the simplistic "smashing the reader over the head with it".
This is not an entirely dark read, but it is a good one. I enjoyed it immensely and it has stayed with me for years after I first read it. A very memorable book!
Keep in mind the author, when reading..........2005-02-01
I read Gehenna very shortly after it came out (maybe... fifteen years ago?) and still have vivid mental images, from this story. There are not enough good things to say about it, but my highest praise is this: read the author's introduction, before reading the book. I usually consider "foreward" as a command to skip to the first chapter, but Paul's is worth reading. The focus of his life is humility, and it was from the standpoint of humility that this book was written. In my opinion, knowing this made the images in the book have an even greater impact.
A man trying to escape his misfortune finds greater peril, when his escape route leads to Hell. He finds that the only way out is to make his way through all of the levels of Hell. He encounters all manner of sins, their specific punishments, and the terrifying masters of each level. Each level forces him to face any sins within himself, if he is to make it through intact.
If it reminds you of Dante's Inferno, it's because that's what it was modelled after, but with Paul's modern twists. This book is highly entertaining, engrossing, and yes, thought provoking. I cannot reccommend it highly enough. Just as a teaser to the monster fans, out there: if for no other reason, you should read this book just to find out why Frankenstein is in it. ;^)
This book gives such vivid images, I have long awaited a movie adaptation, or maybe even a video game. Until then, and even after, get the book. Nothing else would be quite like it.
This Book Has One Great Start.......2004-10-15
I love books which are about personal journeys through Hell and Gehenna is just that. It is well researched and well written. The beginning is especially sharp and will draw you in.
Based on Dante's Inferno, this book brings to mind other books as well, such as Abandon All Hope (self-servingly recommended), and Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle's Inferno (also recommended).
A Look in the Mirror.......2001-11-27
Great book. A modern day version of Dante's Inferno. Immediately catches your attention. Attacks modern day issues and presents logical arguments from both sides - world view and Christian view.
You will quickly find yourself in the pages and you can't help but wonder if you'd pass every level of hell yourself.
I've read this book three times and each time I pick up more insight into human nature and justification.
You'll think about this book often.
A Look in the Mirror.......2001-11-27
Great book. A modeern day version of Dante's Inferno. Immediately catches your attention. Attacks modern day issues and presents logical arguments from both sides (world view and Christian view).
You will quickly find yourself in the pages and you can't help but wonder if you'd pass every level of hell yourself.
I've read this book three times and each time I pick up more insight into human nature and justification.
You'll think about this book often.
Average customer rating:
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Inquiry Into the Scriptural Import of the Words Sheol, Hades, Tartarus and Gehenna: All Translated Hell
Walter Balfour
Manufacturer: Kessinger Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Criticism & Interpretation | Reference | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
General | Reference | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
General | Theology | Reference | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Eschatology | Theology | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
General | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0766159469 |
Book Description
1825. The simple object of the author in this inquiry is to examine the foundation on which the doctrine of endless misery is built. This doctrine rests on the fact or the falsehood that a place called hell, in a future state, is prepared for the punishment of the wicked. This inquiry is principally for the purpose of investigating, if what has been taken for granted by the one party, and conceded by the other, is a doctrine taught in scripture.
Customer Reviews:
Intriguing.......2005-12-20
A book dedicated to the study of "hell." Very interesting from both a theological as well as psychological point of view. Well worth reading.
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