A breezy (if that word can be applied to this subject matter) overview of cultural, mythological, and artistic conceptions of the Underworld and its inhabitants from prehistoric times to the present, drawn from a wide variety of sources, ranging from the Bible and the Tibetan Book of the Dead to Warner Brothers cartoons and Halloween "hell houses", and taking in most of the usual suspects (Dante, Milton, et al.) along the way. While the authors don't deal with most of their subjects in any great depth, preferring to rely on potted summaries and collections of loosely-connected factoids, their approach is lively and in the end informative.
This book was pure hell. It's almost impossible to review this boo without at least on pun so now I have got that out of the way. This book takes on a fascinating subject. The role of hell emerges as the ultimate boogy-man, the looming threat behind the imperative to behave morally. There is a parental aspect to this notion yet as a construct made to apply to adults it has taken on unparalleled horror and description. I found the subject extremely interesting and the authors handing of it just the right mix of modern tongue in cheek skepticism with a genuine appreciation of how this arguably human construct has and continues to play a very real role in the fears of millions.
This book was a study of Hell and the ways different cultures since the beginning of time have perceived it. Some reviews I'd read before I bought the book mentioned how funny it was. It wasn't. But the tone was light enough to make this an enjoyable read.
One thing that remained with me is how terrible our psyches must be to imagine the variety of hells humans have conjured over the past 5 millennium.
A very informative book on various underworlds in different cultures. It's nice to get a glimpse of what different societies thought about the afterlife.