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The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

List Price: $44.95
Your Price: $29.67
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Da Vinci Code
Review: Research it for yourselves. A lot in this book has already been proven false. Its just another fall in our society... look at how much pain is out there, this books goal is to cause doubt and confusion for those not well educated in Christ. Those who know and love Christ have no problem with pathetic claims like this. It can not shake our Rock and our foundation.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A good book, but it dosen't live up to all of the hype
Review: Review by Richard Gray
http://www.rich-gray.com

Robert Langdon, a famous Harvard Symbologist, gets woken by the police late one night while in Paris to give a lecture. He finds that the elderly curator of Louvre has been murdered, his body stripped naked, laid spread eagle, with a pentacle carved into his body and a coded message written beside him. Robert also finds that he is the primary suspect for the murder, and that the French police chief, Fache, may need to convict Langdon to save his own job.

Helped by police code-breaker, and the granddaughter of the Louvre curator, Sophie Neveu, Langdon flees the crime scene in hope of either making it to the US embassy to avoid being convicted of a murder he didn't commit, or solve the strange code left by the body in hopes of proving his innocence.

At the risk of spoiling anything (though if you've read any of the controversy around this book this part is probably already spoiled) Langdon finds that in order to prove his innocence he must find The Holy Grail which is protected by a secrete society called The Priory of Sion. The 'Holy Grail' isn't actually a cup that held Christ's blood, it is actually the bones of Mary Magdalene, the woman who Jesus is supposed to have married, and documents that show Jesus and Mary had children and that Jesus was not divine, simply a great prophet.

As you can probably tell from the last paragraph, this book has ruffled the feathers of many Christians out there, particularly Catholics. Langdon puts forth an alternative version of history that is more or less well researched and will probably seem more appealing to those who are not upset by the idea of Jesus having a wife, or that Jesus is not necessarily divine.

However, this is not to say that all of the claims that Brown makes, or seems to support in this book, are on steady ground. Much of this book is built around proving that Da Vinci believed this version of history by examining his artwork. Some of these 'symbologist' proofs are very interesting, and others are stretching it. There is also the looming, annoying flaw in his logic that just because Da Vinci believed a certain version of history, does not make that version of history correct, regardless of wether or not he was the head of the Priory of Sion.

All of the controversy aside, this is an enjoyable read, though I don't think that, as a novel, it deserves all of the attention that it's getting. Brown is a very skilled writer as far as crafting his sentences and paragraphs, but the plot is a bit formulaic and even verges on unintentional silliness. The ultra short chapters, the constant running and narrow escapes, and how the main characters literally take turns solving the little puzzles makes things a bit tiresome. The plot structure reminded me of the Doctor Who episodes I used to watch as a kid, only instead of time lords, Cyber men and Darleks, you have art symbologists, Opus Dei, and the Priory of Sion.

The book is best read just one short chapter a day (some chapters are short enough to be put on a daily calendar) and if you try to read much more than that the repetitive plot structure might start to get on your nerves. There were points in the story where, if I read too much of it at once, I'd say to myself, "For non-divine Christ sakes, not another puzzle. Just find the blasted thing!"

People who thoroughly enjoy riddles, cross word puzzles, and constant narrow escapes will probably give this book 4 or 5 out of five stars. If you don't fall into that category then this is a solid 3 stars. Also people who don't read very often, or who prefer short, sweet chapters will probably find this book a safe bet. It's a good book, but it just doesn't live up to all of the hype. If the alternative version of history is what draws you to it, then you might be better served by picking up a copy of "Holy Blood, Holy Grail" which seems to be one of Brown's predominant historical sources.

Richard Gray

http://www.rich-gray.com


Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Popcorn poppycock.
Review: Review: Popcorn poppycock

The premise of Da Vinci Code shows promise: grisley murders, a secret set to shake the foundations of Christendom, and a series of (sometimes too easy) puzzles -- a "Whereisit" grafted onto a "Whodonit" connected to a "Whatreallyhappened." While Brown has no stylistic or descriptive talent whatsoever (you'd never want to read this book twice, that's the test), he did keep the juices flowing for me one time through. (So long as I pushed the "suspension of disbelief" meter up to its highest setting.)

The book's many inanities and historical blunders are hard to overlook, however. Brown doesn't know (what one embarrassed pagan historian pointed out) that fear of witches was a traditional part of European paganism, that this fear was squelched by the Church during the "Dark Ages" and then revived during the Renaissance; that tens of thousands, not "five million" witches were killed; or that these crimes occurred mostly in small towns on the margins of State and Church power, not in the shadow of the Vatican. Ironically, Brown himself exploits the psychological mechanism that launches witch hunts in his choice of villains. I myself am neither Catholic, albino, nor physically handicapped; but I find Brown's inability to rise above such pernicious type-casting unfortunate. And his attempt to get inside the minds of his characters is marvelously shallow. One half expects them to jump out of the book and cry, "Hang on! If I were this stupid, how did I get to be a Harvard professor / Catholic bishop / successful criminal?"

As for Brown's chatter about early Christian history, lost Gospels, Church conspiracies, and the cover-up of Jesus' marriage to Mary Magdelene, which he and some rather breathless reviewers manage to take seriously, I admit I found his historical blundering mildly entertaining. For the record, though, the Dead Sea scrolls do NOT contain any Gospels (one scholar claims to have found a few words from the Gospel of Mark in one cave, but that is disputed). As for the so-called "Gnostic Gospels," Philip Jenkin's Hidden Gospels is a good place to start. Discovery of the Nag Hammadi documents rather proves the wisdom of the early Christians in dumping these bogus 2nd and 3rd Century writings: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John show every sign of historicity (as well as socially constructive thinking), and these rather spacey New Age works show no more of either than the Da Vinci Code itself.

Still, in a mindless mood, it is possible to enjoy this book.

Author, Jesus and the Religions of Man

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: how to make money with a book
Review: rewrite the work of a few others into one book: richard leigh, michael baigent, henry lincoln and their research (namely _holy blood, holy grail_); umberto eco's _foucault's pendulum_ has murders and museums and templars and most of the rest of _da vinci code_; lynn picknett's _the templar revelation_ gives us the da vinci connection. and ALL of these books are written better.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: did not live up to the hype
Review: ridiculous story/plot, do not understand what all the fuss was a about. i would not recommend davinci code to anyone

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Fun, but ...
Review: Rip-roaring good read for the beach or any particularly brainless day. It's entertaining, but the characters are cardboard, the history and "facts" utter crap, and - the worst sin of all - I consistently figured out the next "twist" in the mystery long before the characters did, which made for a lot of impatient waiting for the characters to get around to figuring things out. Nothing worse than an utterly predictably plot "twist." (Also, do these people never sleep? Maybe that's why they're so dumb ... they run for like five days with no discernable breaks and a bizarrely distorted time-scale.)

Enjoyed it, but don't particularly reccommend it. And keep it away from any historians, theologians, or art scholars you know - it'll only make them crazy with all its invented facts.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Da Vinci Code
Review: Riveting. You want to keep driving and listening because the story builds on itself that you don't want to stop. Fast-paced story that slows down in the second half, culminating in a less than dramatic ending as the first half of the book builds on. Paul Michael does an excellent job of utilizing different accents with the numerous nationalities involved with the characters to make the story effective, even though some of his efforts to speak as Sophie Neveu, French-bourn heroine, trails off and is hard to hear at the same set audio level as the rest of the characters. From the beginning, you are amazed at the extensive research that Dale Brown had to put into the development of the story. So much so, that the many issues and facts presented to you, and used as reference in the story, want you to do your own research to see if it's fact. I have listened to well over 1,000 adventure/mystery/sci-fi audio books over the last 15 years, and this is up with the best of them.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Recommended Actors
Review: Robert Langdon = Kevin Spacey (looks a little like Dan Brown?)
Sophie: Juliette Binoche
Silas, the albino = bulked up Dennis Hurley
Teabring, The Teacher - Lee Evans I (Something About Mary fame)
Bishop = Alfred Molina
French Police Capt = David Suchet (previously mentioned Hercule Poirot actor)
Grandpa? = distinguished older French Actor... hmmm Jean-Pierre Léaud???

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An INCREDIBLE read!
Review: Robert Langdon fans, rejoice! The hippest hero you'll EVER catch in a Harris tweed is back for another trans-European thrill ride. There are enough conspiracy theories, exotic locales, history lessons, white-knuckle escapes, double crosses, and last second twists to make this book simply impossible to put down.

While it is possible to read right through the book fairly quickly, the background material--such as the nature of the Holy Grail, Da Vinci's hidden codes, the religious symbology, and the early history of the Christian Church, to name just a handful--almost cry out for further study once the last page is turned. That, I think, is one of this book's greatest strengths. Readers who want to read this as a straight thriller will not be disappointed at all. However, those who want to delve deeply into the mysteries of "The DaVinci Code" will find plenty of material to pore over.

This book is a spectacular, command, virtuoso performance by an author who knows how to educate while bringing readers to the edge of their seats. BEG him to keep writing!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fast-Paced Murder Mystery/Historical Thriller
Review: Robert Langdon is a scholar who is awakened in his hotel room one night by the Paris police. When he goes with the authorities to a murder scene, he's pretty upset about it. Apparently, the docent for the Louvre Museum has been murdered. And Mr. Langdon was supposed to have met up with the murder victim several hours prior to his death. But he says he never did. Does the investigating detective believe him?

Sophie Neuveu is a cryptologist who works for the Paris police. She gets 'called' into action when it is discovered that the murder victim left a strange message scrawled on the floor of the Museum. She's also related to someone very involved in this murder case. Whoa!

Mr. Teabing is a Grail enthusiast who has more money than God. He's been trying to find out the truth behind the Holy Grail and a secret society whom he has discovered was designed to protect it: The Priory of Scion. This group had some prestigious names affiliated with it too. Leonardo Da Vinci, Gallileo, Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo, and a slew of other historically famous people.

Silas is an albino who works for a section of the church known as the Opus Dei. He's a hit-man with a serious job to do. If anyone ever found out what the Holy Grail really was and what it represented, the Christian faith might crumble into ruin. That can't happen. So Silas is sent out into the world to make sure it doesn't. He gets his assignments from someone called "The Teacher." An invisible person to all except for one person. Who is this Teacher?

The Good: The pace at which this novel moves is mind-boggling. A reader can whip through it in just a few short days (even the slowest of readers, I would think). The action is excellent, and so are the historical references that Mr. Brown has thoroughly researched (the Priory of Scion, the Holy Grail, Mary Magdalene, Leonardo Da Vinci, etc. etc. etc.).

The 'Not-so-Good': Do these characters ever sleep? After being awakened at an un-Godly hour, Robert Langdon and Sophie Neuveu don't rest for days! That accompanied with their multiple, miraculous epiphanies as they try to break codes that are designed to be nearly unbreakable, stretched believability several times.

I also didn't care much for the ending. Mr. Brown loves to flip the protagonist/antagonist relationships of his characters. I don't mind that normally. But it happened so many times that it became ho-hum after a while. And I felt that the revealing of the prime antagonist was just a tiny bit forced. Something used for shock value more than possible reality. I know, I know, this is fiction, but let's not get too far out here.

Even with these faults, I'm glad that I read 'The Da Vinci Code.' It was worthy of my reading time and it made me look at our current world religions with a new light toward the feminine.

B+ read.


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