Thursday, January 6, 2011

Dan Brown: Da Vinci Code

                                      Voltage
: da Vinci-koden When Robert Langodon, professor of religious symbology at Harvard University and a visit to Paris, brought in the middle of the night by the French security police, he is suddenly thrown into the wettest dream he could ever imagine. Louvre museum curator Jacques Saunière, also grand master of the secret society the Priory of Sion, which according to legend watches the truth about the Holy Grail, has been murdered.
The prelude to "The Da Vinci Code" is a word set for a time reading. It has it all, Christian mysticism, secret societies and cults, macho police officers, intellectual brilliance cast a tie bearing a professor and a female kodknäckare and so has the unexpected twists and turns. A thriller or a novel voltage that will not break the hoes. I suspect that Dan Brown has been doing some research before the writing of this novel."Da Vinci Code" is not just about the assassination of a senior person in the French cultural elite, but it also takes a journey through art and symbols worldwide, and provides answers to long unanswered questions ...
... Why the smile on the Mona Lisa ... where?
Unaware of the French police's intentions and suspicions are Langdon to the Louvre where the strange murder took place. Saunière is dead, naked and stretched in the Grand Galerie. He is enclosed in a circle of blood, like da Vinci's The Vitruvian Man ".Alongside the body is Saunière's last words: a numeric code and a mysterious text, and a pentagram. Langdon learns that he has a code in front of them that could lead to history's best kept secrets: The Priory of Sion monitors. Soon he was using the police kryptolog Sophie Neveu who know the police's suspicions, and who carry unsuspected kunkskaper.
"Da Vinci Code" is entertaining, and I read the stretch. But it is also a välförpackad product that can not penetrate deeper than the subject to keep the excitement going.Curiosity brought when Langdon presents alternative interpretations of the symbolism in da Vinci's art that can be traced to the truth about the Grail. But the reflection is interrupted and the document is rushing forward. The book will fit in everyone's eyes.And it is also the case with the characters who sometimes feels like a mishmash of Indiana Jones and the X-Files
Fiction haphazardly mixed with academic research, and the novel are based in part on the truths about the somewhat enigmatic companion those featured. And I suspect that's where the success of the "da Vinci Code" had to be found. I can only agree with: the mixture makes the book.

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