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The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

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


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Page Turner
Review: WOW! What a great book - so good that it deserves my first review! The mystery surrounding the death kept me intrigued until the end! I loved the riddles that were used to solve each step of the mystery. I found the content of information and facts regarding the evolution of the catholic religion extremely interesting. Once I started reading I couldn't wait to get to the next page. I was the 7th person in my family to read it and have already recommended it to over a dozen friends. This book is money well spent! A great mystery that is not easily solved, contains interesting facts and is very well written.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Help, I've Started and I Can't Stop...
Review: WOW!! It took three pages to get hooked on this book. Then 106 chapters to get unhooked. Every page is exciting. You've GOT to read this book, right now!!

Good old Robert Langdon is at it again. He is up to here in adventure and mystery, and bad guys, and beautiful women, guns, and secrets. Besides, he gets around a lot, even without trying. He's got new friends, Sofia, Teabing, Silas, etc. No hints on the story in this review, just excitement about how good and entertaining this read is. I couldn't stop. I carried it around with me, 5 minutes here, 4 hours there, 30 minutes here. There was no escaping until I finished. Even then, I thought about the book for weeks.

As in "Angles and Demons", the research is complete and total. Exotic places and well known places. If you've traveled, you know these sites. It's like being there. And the story line, well, never does it go where you expect, think or guess. And fast paced, sound moves slower.

Have no fear about reading this book, you'll enjoy it, or maybe you should be afraid, because if you have something else to do you may be in a quandry. I'm telling you, it's impossible to put this book down.

Hat's off to you again Mr. Brown!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Shocking and Suspenseful
Review: Wow, I could not put this book down. It grabbed me right from the beginning. Although the storyline is controversial, I was not averse to hearing a new angle on the Holy Grail and the secret Da Vinci society. It's a shocking supposition about Christianity that has many people up in arms, especially after the "20/20" segment that recently aired regarding this book. Nevertheless, this is America - where you are free to speak, read, or write any story you want. True or not, this book is an exciting and suspenseful read. You don't have to believe in it to become absorbed by it. And you will. Enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow
Review: Wow, i just finished this book and i thought it was one of the best books i have ever red. Usually i am not one to read these kinds of books but my dad red it and loved it so i thought that i would see what it was all about. I couldn't put it down. It was just so compelling. It was as if it kept whispering to me to keep reading (I'M NOT KIDDIND)some of the things i did find a little far fetched but i thought that that just added to the fun. Over all, i thought i was SOOO good that i would recomend it to almost anyone!!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Come on say it with me....FICTION
Review: wow, talk about a morass of mediocre reviews(this included) in what way is an albino monk assassin stereotypical?, technically he's the opposite of stereotypical. Regarding the religious validity of this text, let's talk bible post Congress of Nice, where are the Book of Jasher and the texts for the other 9 books that are missing, where's the validity? But I divulge, I'm the furthest thing from a theologian in the world, believer even. But I am a writer, and I notice the severe dichotomy between the way we view fiction. Stephen King isn't blasted when he writes about vampires, ghosts or aliens; yet we seem to attack Mr. Brown for using fiction that is eerily close to the truth. Whereas King's topics are obviously fiction, Brown's tend to touch very close to an apparently fragile reality. Remember the book is FICTION...FICTION...not satire...not psuedo history...not even an attempt at validity...pure fiction...so settle down and read a good book...or stick to 'Inspirational Fiction'...you know the kind that says that married couples stay happy forever, don't lose their love, and are united by their 'faith'...and stay out of the mainstream

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Almost didn't finish it.
Review: Wow, that was painful. This book had such high aclaim, I felt obligated to finish it, assuming that it would eventally get better. I admit the beginning of this novel was intriguing, but there was just too many details about the Bible and the lost pages. After having to read Brown repeat himself about the keystone over and over, I felt like I was going through a slow death. The reason why I gave three stars was for the character development. I enjoyed the individual characters (with the exception of Sophie--who was flat) and their independent personalities.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great thriller in the historical fiction genre.
Review: Wow, this book has a range of reviews! I guess that is to be expected given the subject matter of the book. I am starting to think that the topics of religion and politics just should not be discussed amongst friends. I think most people are just too thin-skinned, self-important, immature and closed-minded to discuss either of these topics rationally. I will break it down to simple terms. If you are a fan of books in the 'historical fiction' genre (as I am), then you will love this book. If you are an ultra-conservative, bible-thumping zealot then maybe you should just buy another cook book. Read the reviews, even many of the book's detractors admit it is well researched and that the plot is quite suspenseful. This book appeals to me. I am not particularly pious, but I love much of the Renaissance artwork, perhaps even more so for its, often, very religous themes. So, this book appeals to me in many ways. If you have enjoyed books by Robert Ludlum, Ken Follet or Greg Iles, then I think you will enjoy this book as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read for all open minded individuals
Review: WOW, this has to be the best Novel that I have ever picked up. It has a great story yes and it has taken me on a journey through history with an introduction to facts that has challenged a lot of the things that I have been taught growing up. I could not put this book down and eventually when i did put the book down I found myself picking it up again. This novel is more than a suspense thriller, its a history novel told aboard a very intriguing story....its a must read

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Da Vinci Code
Review: Wow, what a book. I could not put it down and had to stay up until well past midnight to finish it! Not only was it a great story, it was very thought provoking for me, too. Although I am sure many of the "facts" were fiction, I really started to think about the role of women in religion and the concept of reconnecting with the feminine power within each of us.

It will take me a while to buy another of his books as I need a rest. I was exhausted at the end from so much reading in such a short period of time!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A detective story for the TV viewer mentality
Review: Written with a screen-writer's sensitivity for pacing and disregard for the audience's intelligence, this book attempts to be a page turner - but keeps putting speed bumps in the way.

A nice opening set of chapters, where a wee-hours murder in a museum gets all the main players introduced, and two mysterious secret societies revealed. Then the author's shallow understanding of Christian and pagan symbolism start getting ini the way. Or was his use of Robert Bly or Anthony Campbell as "research?" He wishes to pit "ancient goddess worship" against Christian history. Then he tosses in lines about "Isis, Wicca, Venus, and other ancient traditions..." Wicca was invented within our lifetimes (lifted whole cloth from Aleister Crowley), not withstanding the popular and uncritical acceptance of this hoax by popular culture.) The author has the "scholar" discussing the "perfect" pentagon that the planet Venus is supposed to draw in the sky every four years. The church stamped this knowledge out, too?

I found myself wanting to toss this book across the room every chapter or two, for the silly "historical" notions that are introduced as fact. One could almost hear the author's thinking, "People don't know about this stuff, let's leave it in!" Just the way TV directors might leave in scenes with telephone wires in the background during a Western. "People won't notice, it is only on screen for 5 seconds, and everyone is half-asleep anyway. It's only TV."

Not recommended.



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