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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: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting
Review: I don't have much time to read but managed to make it through this book. I like my books simple and this book is as simple as you are going to get. It dragged in a few spots, but all of the symbolism and the secret society references were intriguing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Completely and totally thrilling and intriguing
Review: I don't know how anyone could not be completely enthralled with this book. It helps to have an open mind, an adventuresome spirit, and a love for suspense. I simply could not put it down and have the feeling it will push me to many hours of reasearch about all the fascinating questions the book poses. It put so many things out there that I would have never thought of and sheds a different light on age old mysteries and faiths. This was by far one of the best books I have ever read. Amazing!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Gateway of Sorts.
Review: I don't know that I would go so far as to consider this book "Unrelenting Suspense" - it was far from a cliffhanger at any moment... but -

Not typically my line of reading - a friend had just read it and so I read it and we had gobs to talk about.

He being raised (and now lapsing) Catholic - me being completely without any religious upbringing. I didn't think the story itself was so well-written and actually it just went to mush near the end, but we came up with gobs of notes that we'd like to follow up on.

The author however really didn't cite his references - and I guess he's not required to in a work of fiction - but I am curious about the Templars and Da Vinci and the loss of the female aspect of religion through the apparent efforts of the Catholic church.

Acting as a gateway to other ideas or ways of thinking - the book is successful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fascinating!
Review: I don't normally read murder mysteries, but my co-workers were passing this one around with rave reviews, so I thought I'd give it a try. I read it in two days - couldn't put it down! I also found it interesting because so many real-life things are mentioned - paintings by Great Masters and famous churches, whose pictures I could look up on the Internet and see more clearly what was described in the book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This is literature?
Review: I don't often buy books, but I bought "The Da Vinci Code" on the recommendation of more than one good friend. I'll start with the good stuff: Even if not entirely factual, Dan Brown's theories about the female's role in Christianity are intriguing and thought-provoking.
However, the book itself, which makes a lame attempt at conveying these theories, is not even remotely intriguing. Brown's writing style is trite, clunky, and a disgrace to what we call modern "literature." It took me an unusually long time to get through this book because I kept putting it down after only four or five pages at a time, thinking how incredible it was that such tedious writing could make it through the editorial process. I am equally astounded by the number of people who read this book and who are so quick to call it "engaging, thrilling, wonderful, and the best book ever" in their reviews. Perhaps in the hands of a more talented author, this book would have been worthwhile. As it stands, though, the [money] I forked over for this could have easily been better spent going to see a couple of mindless and yet much more entertaining movies. This is the WORST BOOK EVER, and if you liked it, well, quite honestly, you make me sad...

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A fast read, but...
Review: I don't see what all the fuss is about. This novel is a page turner, no doubt about that, with an intriguing plot. Since there are so many reviews here which go over the story I won't go into it -- However I have to say as one of those people who can look at a painting and NOT see mysterious symbolism and plots all over the place I took this novel for what it was - a work of fiction that was a fast read and that's all. I don't think Catholics have to get upset over all the theories this story puts forth, since that's all they are: theories for a work of fiction.

Characters are well-drawn and the descriptions are good. I agree with other reviewers that it reads like a movie treatment - it didn't hurt to compare Robert Langdon to Harrison Ford early in the story, and I agree it was probably intentional. Can an option for a movie starring Ford be far behind??

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Already a Favorite!!
Review: I don't think I could possibly say enough good things about this book. The combination of 2 of my favorite subjects (art history and cryptology) in an extremely well written, intelligent novel made this an instant favorite. Not only will it keep you interested (I read it in just 6 hours because I refused to put it down) but you can learn so much from it. You will literally feel smarter when you put the book down after finishing than you did when you first picked it up. That in itself makes it a must read!
There will of course be a (very) few, such as the anonymous reviewer that posted a few days ago, that are afraid and intimidated by the presentation of the FACTUAL history of their religion. But those few are people who find little enjoyment in fun and intellectual activities.
That said, I would whole-heartedly encourage all book lovers to snap this book up ASAP and dig in. But I'm warning you - you won't come up for air until the very last paragraph has been read!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Umberto Ecco light - less filling, less flavor
Review: I don't understand the success of this book. It follows meekly in the footsteps of many more insightful, intricate mysteries woven around this same plot. This felt like a Fox tv pilot of an Umberto Ecco novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WOW!
Review: I don't usually "do" fiction. But this book was amazing. The plot is allways expanding, the research is allways interesting, and the ending is superb. Now, i do take issue with some of it... Brown included a whole of real research in the novel, but it is mixed in with superstitious conspiracy theories and observations by main characters that look too deep into things. This could lead to a reader of the novel to blow up the signifigance of certain things.

For those who will read the book, please remember this: Not many researchers beleive Mary Magdalene was married to Jesus, The man sitting next to Jesus in DaVinci's last supper doesn't look like a woman, and there is no evidence that the search for the Holy Grail was the search for the womb of Mary Magdalene, the bloodline of Jesus Christ.

All in All, however, this is an amazing Novel and the only one I will probably ever read. It's back to non-fiction for me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Couldn't Put It Down
Review: I don't usually get into suspense/mystery thrillers, which made my discovery of this novel that much more of a pleasant surprise. Its power, of course, comes from the fact that it builds on actual theories and little-known facts about ancient events and the formation of the early church. It whetted my appetite to find out more. Extremely thought-provoking and highly recommended.


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