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Thread: Da Vinci Code

  1. #1
    Scribe The Thing's Avatar
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    Da Vinci Code

    I would recommend Dan Brown's 'Da Vinci Code'. It's clever and intelligent and moves along at a cracking pace. Just don't believe the hype... it's not as controversial as people are making out.

    If anybody tells you it's anti-church, they haven't read the whole book because it all turns round in the last 50 pages or so...
    What's the point of being grown up if you can't be childish once in awhile? - DR WHO

  2. #2
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    Intelligent?

    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...
    Metta.

  3. #3
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    Since the plot is about France and takes place here in my country, there has been a lot of articles in reliable French magazines and I can tell you that 90%
    of what is said in the book is pure bull****.

    I know of all the places Brown has mentionned, having lived in Paris and in the Saint-Sulpioe church district for long years.
    What he refers to does not exist.

    And I know what I am talking about, since I have read the book. I forced myself to finish it because it is badly-written, uninteresting and so full of historical, architectural mistakes that Harry Potter is a non-fictional document compared to it.

    So well, let's not about that book AGAIN, please. There are so many better books to read than this one !!

  4. #4
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    I really like dan brown, and wanted to read the de vince code. But my dad(i'm only 15 -_-) said its too anti religion so he doesn't approve of me reading it. Bull! if i want to read it let me read it! but if people don't like it so much, who knows, maybe I shouldn't waste my time on it.....ohs wells. lol. I probably won't be ALLOWED to read it anyways.
    alice


  5. #5
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    It is a work of fiction. It is not real. I enjoyed it, and so have many others.

    When I said it was intelligent I was referring to the little puzzles littered throughout. They kept me interested. Maybe I'm simple.

    If people are dumb enough to take it as fact maybe they believe Middle Earth is a real place.

    Maybe I should spell it out to anybody who hasn't read this book yet: You will find it under the FICTION section of your local bookstore. If you do, however, find it under non-fiction, then the shop owner is an idiot.

    I will now stop waffling.
    What's the point of being grown up if you can't be childish once in awhile? - DR WHO

  6. #6
    Lizra
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    I read the Da Vinci Code.
    And I admit I liked it after finishing it, at first.
    But then I decided to read Angels & Demons, also by Dan Brown.
    And I don’t know if I was the only one to notice how alike in plot the books were.
    So I came to the conclusion that he just wanted his knowledge to be expressed in a novel form so he could attract a wider range of audiences.
    But honestly, the "facts" that he wrote about are not all that "intelligent", most not even true.

    That’s my take on it, but I understand why some people enjoy that book, because I did too.

  7. #7
    Prolific Writer lisajane's Avatar
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    *coughs*
    'Beauty stands and waits with gravity to start her death-defying leap. And he, a little charleychaplin man, who may or may not catch her fair eternal form spreadeagled in the empty air of existence.' - Laurence Felinghetti, 'The Acrobat'

  8. #8
    Prolific Writer Talia_Brie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Saponification
    Intelligent?

    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...
    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...

    I will hold my tongue...

    No I can't.

    Intelligent? Are you mad?

    It's not even well written!

    I crap more creativity than is evident in Dan Brown's writing.
    Quote Originally Posted by Gohn
    Never take what Talia says seriously.

  9. #9
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    It is an excellent piece of writing, worthy of being remembered along with the art works that my dog deposited on my lawn.

  10. #10
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    (I posted this at the other Da Vinci thread, so I hope no one minds me pasting it here as well. I'm being lazy. If it's inappropriate or confusing maybe a mod. could just remove one of them. I love the 'discussion' around this book. It's really not worth it but seems to have created so much interest!! )


    I read it. Not once did I pause at a wonderful phrase or go to make a cup of tea so I could mull over a new way Dan Brown expressed something. I never caught my breathe in the way good writing makes me do. The strongest sense of disbelief and cynicism was my reading companion.

    Yet I couldn't put the book down. He can't write for peanuts in any real sense but does he hold your attention and create suspense? Yes for me he did. Can I remember anything meaningful from the reading of it? No.

    BUT please tell me this? Has anyone read the little book called "The Da Vinci Cod. a fishy tale"?

    I won't spoil the read for anyone but be warned don't read it on a train, don't read it on a plane, don't read it anywhere in public if you are easily embarrassed and have a funny bone to speak of. Don't read it if you have a bladder problem and don't read it if you have unsympathetic friends with an intellectual-only view on life.

    Otherwise - Read it. Tell me what you think. And let me rest with the knowledge that it really is that good and I am not certifiably insane. (Which is what a cafe full of smart people did think, when I was trying to read it over my hot chocolate). I read the back cover and almost collapsed with laughter right there in the book aisle of K-Mart. Now here's a writer that knows how to digress with style.

    It helps to have read the Dan Brown version, but is not imperative I don't imagine. regards huni.
    each time we see the face ...it is our own ideas of him which we recognize. Proust

  11. #11
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    Everybody I know told me that it is probably one of the best books they've ever read. Sheep, every last one of them!

    Horribly written, awkward transitions from present to past, and some of the solutions to situations are so childish! For example, Madonna of the Rocks and Sophie threatening to ruin it. Are you kidding me? Dr. Suess could've come up with something more clever than that.

    However, I will concede the fact he kept my attention in some unexplainable fashion. The suspense was good and I suppose Dan Brown is a prime example of how an interesting and original plot can exceed a writer's ability and still be somewhat entertaining.

    Oh yeah, anybody interested in the movie? Summer 2006, Tom Hanks, Alfred Molina, Ian McKellan, and Ron Howard. Maybe we'll get something out of it.
    "You see, there's no place for you in my world."
    "Then I suppose I'll have to make my own."

  12. #12
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    The story got kind of boring after a while. I didnt like it. Stephen King beats him out when it comes to crap.
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  13. #13
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    Steven King's characters are multi-dimensional, his plots very gripping and interesting, and he is about a million times better than Dan Brown.

  14. #14
    Profound Writer valeca's Avatar
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    I'm about 3/4's of the way through it now. I'm rather enjoying it. I was surprised such poor writing made it off the presses, but it's entertainment.

    Facts and location? Pfftt, when I read fiction, I'm willing to put that aside in favour of a good story. Suspension of disbelief anyone...?

    So what if putting her knee through the painting was a simple solution. Some elaborately concocted sceme in that moment would have been ridiculus.

    What he did was take some little bits and wove them together so they made sort of linear sense. They don't have to be true, or even accurate, as long as they jive together.

    If I had to name something about the book I didn't like, it'd be the constant use of making the reader wait (especially at the beginning). There were times it got irritating...then again, it did cause me to turn pages.
    The plot thickens...but only if you stir it constantly over a low heat. ~valeca on Twitter

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    Prolific Writer Talia_Brie's Avatar
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    I wrote this rant on another thread, but it relates to Val's last comment.

    I'm ashamed to say I'm reading The Davinci Code. I guess I just had to know what all the fuss is about.

    So far it's a very well paced story, and it reminds me a lot fo the writing style that Matthew Reilly uses. Reilly is an Australian author who writes frantically paced action thrillers.

    I would describe both Brown and Reilly's work as being 'unputdownable' (which is a really terrible word gaining common usage, but that's a whole other argument). But in saying that I'm not necessarily saying the books were excellent, just that they are difficult to put down.

    And the reason for this, I think, isn't the story itself (though Reilly's stories are exciting and would make excellent movies), but the structure. Both Reilly and Brown end all their chapters with cliffhangers (in the case of Ice Station quite literally, with one chapter ending with two characters actually hanging over the edge of a cliff on a Maghook).

    They're like those movie serials you read about (or perhaps saw if you're old enough) where the superhero/spy/adventureer would end the episode with their car flying out over the edge of a cliff (gasp) only to begin again next week, two seconds previously and jumping from the car. Annie Wilkes has something to say about that (you'll understand that reference if you've read Misery, otherwise ignore).

    This is a blatant, but effective, way of manipulating the reader into having a heightened opinion of the book because they find themselves staying up until 12.30 in the morning, as I did last night, waiting for somethign to get resolved so they can go to bed.

    And that's today's rant.
    Quote Originally Posted by Gohn
    Never take what Talia says seriously.

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