Showing posts with label The Da Vinci Code. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Da Vinci Code. Show all posts
Sunday, November 15, 2009
The Impact of the Truth
If there was anything that was different in The Da Vinci Code, the effect would not have been as influence. What made the book so captivating was the partial truth to it. Without it, people would have just seen it as another book left on the shelf. The reason it was a successful novel was not because Dan Brown knew the whole truth about the secret in Mona Lisa's smile. It was because he knew how to make his readers think, and knew what they could possibly think of. He is a skillful exploiter of the truth. Preparing the book with interesting facts, readers start to believe everything the author says.
Confusion from the Author
Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code, a fictional novel, was written in a factual means. Brown took controversial topics like religion and myth and created a literary masterpiece. The author used actual organizations, places, and even some actual names. He also created fictional characters and places, but made no attempt to allow them to appear. Although the facts used in this book was misinterpreted, it played an important role in distracting the reader's attention away from their own thoughts and onto those of the author.
A Historical Story
The Da Vinci Code was different than books that I usually take the time to read. I was lucky enough to have the version of the novel that had pictures and explanations of the historical objects used in the story. If I did not have that, I would have lost with all these Parisian artifacts. All the mysteries and the solutions that come from it are so suspenseful that I did not want to stop reading. There were stories and myths on religion predominately.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
A Puzzling Story

Another interesting novel to read was the Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. The main character, Robert Langdon is the professor of religious symbology at Harvard University. He tries to attempt to solve the murder of the renowned curator Jacques Sauniere of the Louvre museum in France. Near the curator’s body was a perplexing code found. The curator’s granddaughter and Langdon attempt to decipher the strange riddles and are surprised to find a path of clues hidden by the efforts of the artist, Leonardo Da Vinci. Brain teaser and number puzzles were involved. The last, most thought-provoking challenge was finding the Holy Grail.
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