Author: Dan Brown
Genre: fiction, conspiracy thriller
Publication info: Pocket Books, 2009
Pages: 710
Novel #4.
Dan Brown sure knows how to write 'em, doesn't he? At least when it comes to thrills and suspense. It took me all of two days to read (quite nearly all—I took some time off work to be able to finish it for class). I don't think any Harry Potter book ever had that effect on me.
If you're looking for some thought-provoking fiction, you won't find it here, but if you want a book that will keep you turning pages, you need look no further than Angels & Demons. I know Dan Brown is more famous for his controversial The Da Vinci Code, but this is actually the book that started it all (although the movies have it differently).
Robert Langdon is a symbologist at Harvard (did you know such a profession existed?) who happens to have some expertise in ancient conspiracies. For this reason, he is summoned by the director of CERN, the famed Swiss center of scientific research, to investigate a murder. The murdered man's body has the name "Illuminati" burned into it, a name which turns out to be that of a secret society, long believed to be extinct, of scientists who rebel against the Catholic Church.
One thing leads to another, and soon Langdon and the young, attractive scientist Vittoria Vetra are rushing to Vatican City to stop an unimaginable threat: hidden somewhere in the city is an antimatter bomb that could vaporize everything within a half-mile. It's conclave, the time when the church elects a new pope, and Langdon and Vetra must uncover the secrets of the Illuminati in order to find the bomb before it explodes at midnight. Oh, and the four favorite candidates for the papacy have been kidnapped as well.
It's not exactly heady stuff, but it's pretty exciting. I'll have to admit I got into it. I even had a dream with a similar story just the other night. My dream also had The Beatles in it, who, I'm sorry to say, do not make an appearance in this book.
As you might expect, the book sacrifices some things in order to create suspense, such as character development or even believability. I wanted to laugh out loud at the numerous times Langdon narrowly escapes death. But hey, it's all in good fun, right?
Yes, it's fun, but it's not much more than that. Angels & Demons will give you a thrilling ride once, but it's not the sort of book you'd want to read over and over again. It's more the sort of book you'd buy as a cheap paperback (so you don't have to wait for years on the hold list at the library) and then trade it in at a used bookstore. But I have to hand it to Dan Brown—he's good at what he does.
1 comment:
It's gotta be better than the movie. Not that I've seen that.
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