Starting full time work again has really slowed down both my reading and my blog writing. Luckily I had some spare time this weekend and I was able to finish the book I have been slowly working on for a few weeks now. I was a little suprised. Normally I get so caught up in Dan Brown books that even if I am busy I somehow devour them quickly, this one was a little different though.
I am a huge Dan Brown fan, and I think Inferno was one of the most fantastic, thought-provoking books I have ever read (the movie butchered it, if you haven’t read the book then do it now). I was excited to jump into another mystery of Robert Langdon, and learn more about the world, art and history on the way. I was a little let down by this book if I am honest. It just didn’t grip me, or make me want to tear into the book. By the last 100 pages I was hooked and ready to finish, but the 400 pages before that were a little slow.
The setting of this book, Washington DC was the perfect choice, and I never realised how much symbology and meaning surrounded the city’s design. It has inspired me to want to go to Washington DC soon. If the storyline was a little simpler or more accessible, I think the book would be enthralling. I don’t know whether it is because I am less familiar with Masonry or the layout of Washington DC that I couldn’t get sucked in, or whether this storyline was just a little too chaotic for everyone. Maybe it’s because Masonry is not as widespread or important in Australia so it didn’t have as much meaning for me, or maybe there were just too many important characters spiralling into chaos to follow. Maybe the problem was also that I guessed the big plot twist at the end in the first 100 pages. It’s hard to say what the reason was.
What I can say is that it was interesting, and it certainly made me question a lot of what we know accept as commonplace (recognising the fact that Dan Brown’s books are pieces of fiction and not fact). It was still an interesting read, and you can never go wrong with a Dan Brown book, but it certainly wasn’t his best work.
Overall, I have to give it a 3 out of 5. I am hoping his others are much more like Inferno and Da Vinci Code so I can reignite my love of Dan Brown.