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dan brown... utter genius!!
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Does anyone else LOVE Dan Brown books like i do!!?? I first read The DaVinci Code (like tons of other people i know) and was absolutly hooked. Have read the 3 others he's written too, Deception Point, Digital Fortress and Angels and Demons (have nearky finished this one). He's a great author and i can never put his books down! Anyone else like his books???
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am aware that DB has masses of fans around the world, but I am absolutely not one of them! I find is prose clunky, his dialogue unconvincing, his characters unbelievable, and his plots complex and impossible to follow.
However, I absolutely accept that millions of people love his novels, they just don't do it for me.
However, I absolutely accept that millions of people love his novels, they just don't do it for me.
I'm with Andy - I trudged through DVC out of a masochistic sense of having to finish it once I'd started, and I wouldn't go near another one of his books. Very poorly written, even more poorly researched, unoriginal, and just plain tedious a lot of the time. However, like Andy, I accept that he has huge numbers of fans, and if he floats your boat.......
I think I am somewhere in between all the previous posters.
I thought DaVinci code was a page turner, as were the other 2 somewhat unmemorable books of his that I read (one about another female decryptor and one set in the north pole!) I thought all 3 of them were quite dodgy in terms of how they were written eg "poorly written", "clunky prose" but they did seem to be well researched - or at least well enough researched so that the average reader would get a sense of a world that is otherwise unknown to them eg NASA, Catholic church history etc.
Although Dan Brown may be closer to Jackie CoIlins than Shakespeare, I believe that there is room for both and I am pleased that he has written something that has got non-readers interested in reading. That must be a good thing?
I thought DaVinci code was a page turner, as were the other 2 somewhat unmemorable books of his that I read (one about another female decryptor and one set in the north pole!) I thought all 3 of them were quite dodgy in terms of how they were written eg "poorly written", "clunky prose" but they did seem to be well researched - or at least well enough researched so that the average reader would get a sense of a world that is otherwise unknown to them eg NASA, Catholic church history etc.
Although Dan Brown may be closer to Jackie CoIlins than Shakespeare, I believe that there is room for both and I am pleased that he has written something that has got non-readers interested in reading. That must be a good thing?
I've read a couple of his books, but I could never shake off the impression that they weren't so much novels as film treatments. Every sentence seems to scream "Hey! Hollywood people! Make a movie out of this! Hey! Wouldn't this bit look great on a big screen?! Hey! Sexy female protagonist! Hey! This'll do great at the box ofice! Hey! Gimme money! Hey!".
I read DVC all the time feeling I'd read it before - this was confirmed by the court case about him ripping off 'Holy Blood, Holy Grail' written 20 years previously. I quite liked Digital Fortress but the rest were very samey - I agree with Jenstar they feel as if they are written with movie rights in mind.
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