The Da Vinci Code Dan Brown
The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown is a fast-paced thriller where the main characters have to decipher clues in artwork, architecture, and riddles to get to the bottom of a murder and save themselves. As a thriller, it is an O.K. pick, but not as good as Brown's Angels and Demons. The main characters discuss unsubstantiated religious ideas as if they are facts (and Brown's 'Fact' page implies that they are). This may offend or annoy some readers.
Pros
- Fast-paced
- Interesting riddles
- Unique idea for suspense novel
Cons
Dan Brown is the bestselling author of Digital Fortress, Angels & Demons, and Deception Point. He lives in New England. 4am starts and spinach smoothies: Da Vinci Code's Dan Brown on how to write a bestseller. David Smith in New York. As he sets out to spill his.
- Predictable outcome if you have read other Brown books
- Unbelievable story
- Misleading 'Fact' page
- Characters propose unsubstantiated religious theories that will be offensive to some
Description
- Robert Langdon, a Harvard symbologist, gets caught up in a murder investigation in the Louvre
- Secret societies, family secrets, clues hidden in artwork, and a Church conspiracy
- A suspense novel that is easy to read, if not believable
The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown: Book Review
We read The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown years after its initial release, so my reaction is probably different than those who discovered it before the hype. To them, perhaps, the ideas were novel and the story exciting. To us, the story was so similar to Brown's Angel's and Demons that we found it predictable and was able to guess some of the twists early on. As a thriller, it definitely kept us reading at points, but we never got as lost in the story as we would have liked. We would only rate the mystery as okay and the ending as somewhat disappointing.
The Da Vinci Code is a thriller, and should be taken as such; however, the premise of the story undermines the tenets of Christianity, thus the novel has stirred up a lot of controversies and spawned nonfiction works debunking the theories discussed by characters. Does Dan Brown have an agenda other than entertainment? We don't know. He certainly set the stage for controversy with the 'Fact' page at the beginning of the novel, which implies that the ideas discussed in the novel are true. There are also several points where the tone of the novel is sort of condescending in the presentation of its religious and supposedly feminist ideas. For us, the controversial ideas just came across as annoying in light of the mediocre story.
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