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You have to be careful not to tread too heavily on sour grapes when it comes to Dan Brown, because the wine it creates is foul and bitter, and leaves you rather than the author of The Da Vinci Code with a bloody awful hangover. There is nothing wrong in doing extremely well writing potboilers about lawyers, dinosaurs, or Napoleonic soldiers, or even raptor-riding barristers at Waterloo, but it's Brown's deliberate obscuring of the vital barrier between fact and fiction that is so problematic. He injects a strong political and theological agenda into his writing, and claims to be exposing his readers to truths they otherwise would never know. So it's not that he writes so badly — and every reviewer has listed the stylistic howlers and aching clichés — but that he has a genuinely noxious influence. 

The man is overestimated in that he is, simply, taken extremely seriously by more people than we might like to believe, and has led myriad innocents to question or lose their Christian faith, or embrace entirely   ersatz history. If you doubt it, visit the Temple in London and hear the guides begin their chat with a long correction of Dan Brown's version of medieval Europe. Good Lord, it's why the tourists are there in the first place!

Brown's new novel, Inferno, is simply more of the last book, which was more of the one before that. This time he misunderstands and perverts the writings of Dante, libels the Philippines, pretty much advocates eugenics and strident population control, and mocks anybody who believes in the concepts of sin, salvation and heaven. Oh, and there's plenty of Catholic-bashing and wild conspiracy theories again, of course.

It was The Da Vinci Code that made Brown famous, in which he gave us the hysterical claim that Christ's followers never thought of Him as a messianic figure, and that the earliest written documents substantiate this.

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Barbara Mathews
July 10th, 2013
10:07 PM
I am a cradle born Catholic and have recently gone back to the Church. I read the "Da Vinci Code" and last September I retired with 30 years from profession as a librarian. I picked up Brown's anti-catholic leanings in the book, but I dismissed them and put the book where it properly belongs, in the Fiction section. It's alright to mention his facts are inaccurate, but I would think the Church should stress Brown is a fiction writer and not a theologian. There are number of good non-fiction resources that can be referred to give accurate information regarding the history of Christianity and the Roman Catholic Church, including our warts.

Angelic by nature
July 10th, 2013
10:07 PM
Both of his movies were long, boring and with predictable endings. I wanted to see them because of the hipe but then after half way through of both movies I realized that the people who love his stuff are stupid. I guess garbage sells doesn't it?

Eljunia
July 10th, 2013
8:07 PM
I finished reading Inferno, I don't take Dan Brown seriously and the plot of this book read more like a tourist guide book than anything else. For me Angels and Demons has the most exciting plot.

Anonymous
July 4th, 2013
12:07 PM
I would agree with all this save for the claim that Jesus was crucified for claiming to be the Son of God. Crucifixion was a Roman punishment and the sign Pilate ordered to be placed on the cross referred to Jesus as King of The Jews.Pilate seemed to be concerned with Jesus as making a claim to Earthly power and possibly a threat to civil order at the tense time of Passover. The Temple authorities may have had different motives for accusing him and handing him over to Pilate.

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