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The Lost Symbol (Robert Langdon, No. 3) |  | Author: Dan Brown Publisher: Doubleday Books Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy Used: $6.40 as of 3/20/2010 17:04 CDT details You Save: $23.55 (79%)
New (156) Used (354) Collectible (33) from $6.40
Seller: good_books_cds_and_movies Rating: 2334 reviews Sales Rank: 83
Media: Hardcover Edition: First Edition Pages: 528 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 6.1 x 1.7
ISBN: 0385504225 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780385504225 ASIN: 0385504225
Publication Date: September 15, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780385504225 | | • | Condition: NEW | | • | Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark. |
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Product Description New Novel by Dan Brown, author of Digital Fortress, Da Vinci Code, Angels and Demons, and Breaking Point. Supposedly with content on the Mormons and on Freemasonry! New adventures of Robert Langdon.
Amazon.com Review Let's start with the question every Dan Brown fan wants answered: Is The Lost Symbol as good as The Da Vinci Code? Simply put, yes. Brown has mastered the art of blending nail-biting suspense with random arcana (from pop science to religion), and The Lost Symbol is an enthralling mix. And what a dazzling accomplishment that is, considering that rabid fans and skeptics alike are scrutinizing every word.
The Lost Symbol begins with an ancient ritual, a shadowy enclave, and of course, a secret. Readers know they are in Dan Brown territory when, by the end of the first chapter, a secret within a secret is revealed. To tell too much would ruin the fun of reading this delicious thriller, so you will find no spoilers here. Suffice it to say that as with many series featuring a recurring character, there is a bit of a formula at work (one that fans will love). Again, brilliant Harvard professor Robert Langdon finds himself in a predicament that requires his vast knowledge of symbology and superior problem-solving skills to save the day. The setting, unlike other Robert Langdon novels, is stateside, and in Brown's hands Washington D.C. is as fascinating as Paris or Vatican City (note to the D.C. tourism board: get your "Lost Symbol" tour in order). And, as with other Dan Brown books, the pace is relentless, the revelations many, and there is an endless parade of intriguing factoids that will make you feel like you are spending the afternoon with Robert Langdon and the guys from Mythbusters.
Nothing is as it seems in a Robert Langdon novel, and The Lost Symbol itself is no exception--a page-turner to be sure, but Brown also challenges his fans to open their minds to new information. Skeptical? Imagine how many other thrillers would spawn millions of Google searches for noetic science, superstring theory, and Apotheosis of Washington. The Lost Symbol is brain candy of the best sort--just make sure to set aside time to enjoy your meal. --Daphne Durham
More from Dan Brown | | |  | | The Da Vinci Code | Angels & Demons | Deception Point | Digital Fortress |
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 2334
Frantic and Breathtaking March 20, 2010 Joao Cortez (Porto, Portugal) Dan Brown sticks to a winning formula. In the timespan of one day, Robert Langdon goes through a dramatic thrilling adventure. Similar to 'The Da Vinci Code', Dan Brown is excellent in mixing history, religion, philosophy, science and legends to make the story even more compelling. I could not rest until I finished the book - highly entertaining, frantic and breathtaking!
Another silly ending, but fun getting there March 19, 2010 monsieurms (USA East Coast) I'm not going to write an A-Z review--it is too well covered by everyone else. I would like to focus just on one point, as I've recently read Steve Berry's Templar Legacy as well as this in quick succession---I'm weary of these inane endings where some stunning revelation is (or is not) made and then no one ever finds out about it. It is beyond belief that so many important things can happen--and then they are just covered up. If you can live with the inevitable "HUH? You gotta be kidding..." which is particularly going to happen with this book, which ends with a whimper not a bang, it is a fun read. But authors who bite off more than they can chew inevitably wind up disappointing in the end. Brown had nowhere to go with this.
About midway through, I could no longer deny how utterly irritating this book is. March 18, 2010 Bethany Clark (atlanta, ga) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I checked this book out from the library (actually, I got it on audio and downloaded it into my itunes) and am very glad I paid not a cent for it. The best part about the time I spent with this book was the narrator, who has an eveness of expression and a versitile vocal range that was also fantastic in the audio of DaVinci Code. But as I listened to this book, Lost Symbol, while at work, I became so irritated with hearing the same words over and over again - Dan Brown's signature words - that I began to take note of how bloody often they came up, both from character's mouths and in the story's descriptions; indeed these words are staggerinly overused in this book. It would not be a stretch to postulate, in fact, that the following words were mentioned six times on each page; I simply kept a notepad document open and added a word if I heard it more than a dozen times:
brotherhoods, wisdom, mysteries, secret, guardians, history, myth, centuries, religious, masons, masonic, custodians, feared, ancient, protecting, impenetrable, perfect, precise, empowering, impenetrable, portal, symbol, engraved, unveil, dangerous, precision, decipher, encoded, secret language, mysterious, encrypted, obscured, mankind, imbued, unveils, sacred, decipher, scholar, well known, early philosophers and artists, instant, in accordance, modern, meticulous, art, cataclysmic, unleash, dire, destroyed, crimson, ordained, key, map, mystical traditions, alchemist...
I apologize if my list repeats itself; I must've spent too much time with this novel (bada bing!).
So what I recommend for those considering reading this book, is that you simply read the above words, weave a ridiculous and anticlimactic story between them, and save yourself the two weeks I wasted by simply making up your own plot. I bet you'll come up with something better/more interesting/more plausible. And if you still must read this book, only read every OTHER chapter and you won't miss a beat, since there are no less than 175 throw-away pages in this tired, sad, past-its-prime, beating a dead horse, little book.
So disappointing March 18, 2010 Mama Llama (Brooklyn, NY USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I loved The DaVinci Code (read it first), and really enjoyed Angels and Demons. Liked everything else until now. I plodded through it because it COULD have worked. Good idea. Good plot (generally). Just did NOT pull together.
Worst book of Mr. Brown March 17, 2010 Edmundo J. Cepeda (Nashville TN) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It has to be absolutely one of the worst books I have ever read. The plot twists you can see them coming a mile away. The ending is so weak and stupid that it just doesn't make any sense. If you still want to know what happens in Robert Langdon latest adventure I would suggest you wait for the movie; that way you will still waste some hours, but at least no more than two (hopefully)
Showing reviews 1-5 of 2334
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