Nicholas ([info]nhw) wrote,
@ 2005-09-10 22:47:00
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Entry tags:bookblog 2005, dan brown

September Books 2) The Da Vinci Code
2) The Da Vinci Code, by Dan Brown

Hmm. The roots of this book are pretty obvious. Some of the basic plot lines have been done much better elsewhere. For instance: Young woman who has been educated in cryptography - Neil Stephenson' sThe Diamond Age. Dubious proceedings involving a plane flight from France to London - Agatha Christie's Death in the Clouds. Half-baked ancient lore - Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln's Holy Blood, Holy Grail. Bad guys who are masters of disguise and preposterous conspiracies - Agatha Christie's Tommy and Tuppence. Half-baked ancient lore combined with bad guys who are masters of disguise and preposterous conspiracies - Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum, or alternately any episode of Scooby Doo.

The prose of the first couple of chapters is thunderously bad, but after that it settles into fairly routine rubbish. Some of the plot twists, like the first anagrams, the first password, the mysterious script, and the identity of the Teacher, seemed pretty blindingly obvious to me. None of it was particularly elegantly executed, and many historical details are simply wrong - as are some contemporary ones - Opus Dei members are not monks! In the book's defence, he doesn't overdo the mystical explanations, relying in the end on simple human explanations of his characters' far-fetched actions. And there is a certain charm in that most of the book takes place within a single twelve-hour period. But I really don't understand what people see in it, or why it has been so popular.



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[info]thishardenedarm
2005-09-10 09:10 pm UTC (link)
people, us proles, always like the feeling that we've been shown a glimpse of the mysteries/doctrines behind the exoteric veils. initiation without the pain.

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[info]torquemadman
2005-09-10 09:39 pm UTC (link)
"Vinci" was like one long non-interactive adventure game: you wander around, pick up things, apply them on other things, solve puzzle, get more things, rinse, repeat. Wouldn't mind playing it, reading it was really boring. What kept me on was curiousity whether I pinpointed the bad guy (on his first appearance) right and if the plot would go just the way I thought it would. Was correct on both terms.
I'm guilty trying his other book too, "Angels and Demons" -- it was too amusing to discover it was exact clone of "Da Vinci".

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[info]marykaykare
2005-09-10 10:10 pm UTC (link)
Half-baked ancient lore combined with bad guys who are masters of disguise and preposterous conspiracies - Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum, or alternately any episode of Scooby Doo.

This made me actually laugh out loud. On a day wherein I am notably deficient in --- arrrgh -- the word is gone: those brain chemicals that make you feel good. Dammed nominal aphasia. Anyway I'm deficient in them today and laughing helps up the supply. So thanks.

MKK

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[info]marykaykare
2005-09-11 10:11 pm UTC (link)
Endophins that's the ticket! I remembered the word as soon as I shut down the computer. Of course.

MKK

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[info]ajshepherd
2005-09-10 10:56 pm UTC (link)
I notice there's now a big new premium illustrated hardback edition of Holy Blood & the Holy Grail out. I don't recall what happened with Baigent & Leigh's efforts to sue Dan Brown for plagiarism, but this looks like BLL & their publisher decided to try and make some dosh out of the DaVinci Code phenomenon somehow or other...

And they would have gotten away with it, if it wasn't for those meddling kids....!

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It serves 2 functions
[info]applez
2005-09-10 11:03 pm UTC (link)
1. It is the literary version of bubblegum pop music

2. It is sufficiently vapid to make excellent poolside reading, where water and lotion stains are not a problem. I'd like to think these millions of copies worldwide are being left in hotel drawers, right beside the Gideon Bibles. ;-)

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My review from some time ago
[info]applez
2005-09-10 11:16 pm UTC (link)
http://www.livejournal.com/users/applez/366816.html

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[info]communicator
2005-09-10 11:32 pm UTC (link)
Coincidentally I read an excellent review of Da Vinci Code a few minutes ago here

http://coldfury.com/reason/?p=844

He rips it up

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[info]wyvernfriend
2005-09-11 12:52 am UTC (link)
I have to agree.

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[info]purplepooka
2005-09-11 11:34 am UTC (link)
Thank you for justifying my decision to put it down after the first chapter and not bother - I was forcibly lent it by my dad...

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[info]elmyra
2005-09-11 06:51 pm UTC (link)
Fully agree. Unfortunately, the bad writing is so addictive that I read his three other books as well. They made me cry, "Digital Fortress" in particular, for its unquestioning, naive treatment of the NSA and surrounding privacy issues. *twitch*

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[info]mr_renaissance
2005-09-12 12:25 pm UTC (link)
I didn't read it (and I never will), because I had already read "Angels & Demons" and was thoroughly disgusted with Dan Brown's complete lack of style or characterization, not to mention his lousy research.

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[info]etherealfionna
2005-09-12 02:08 pm UTC (link)
Some of the plot twists [...] seemed pretty blindingly obvious to me.

This was one of my major criticisms, too. The characters came across as complete morons.

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