Archive for the ‘He Said/She Said Review’ Category

Our 100th Post! – The Lost Symbol – He Said/She Said

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

She said:

Like Angels and Demons, and The Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown’s third novel, The Lost Symbol solves puzzles, analyzes paintings, explores religious misconceptions and reveals forgotten histories in its 509 pages. Spanning 12 hours, this story is a thriller replay of The Da Vinci Code, except that it is set in Washington instead of Paris and Masons feature as the star secret society, instead of Opus Dei.

Langdon arrives in Washington D.C., invited by his wealthy friend Peter Solomon, a high-ranking Mason, to deliver a speech in the Capitol building. But there is no speech, only an “invitation” fashioned by a severed hand believed to be that of his friends. The hand is marked with Masonic tattoos and propped to point to an 1865 painting of George Washington depicted as a pagan god. The hand of mysteries directs Robert Langdon to find a legendary Masonic treasure for a ritualistic killer who has kidnapped his dear friend all the while special ops squads are hunting him down.

Storylines include, alchemy, the war on terror and the study of Noetics, a branch of physics that draws on string theory that attempts to prove that “mind over matter” is a scientific reality.

Although expectations for this novel were probably not likely to be reached, I enjoyed scenes such as Langdon and Katherine’s narrow escape from the CIA by riding the book conveyor belts of the Library of Congress. I was also fascinated by  the hidden Masonic threads in America’s founding, such as the Masonic affiliations of at least half the Founding Fathers, including George Washington, and the design of the dollar bill, with its prominent pyramid on the back.

I did find the book plagued with choppy writing, and unrealistic scenes. For instance, in the end when the characters climax through an especially emotional and draining experience, Katharine directly spends the evening in the rotunda at Peter’s urgings and Peter meets with Robert in his office to have an intellectual, story-telling moment after spending 2 days getting tortured. Why would they not head directly to the hospital?

The Lost Symbol more or less follows Dan Brown’s winning formula that includes Robert Langdon, a pretty woman, a mystery shrouded in code, and a thoroughly evil twisted villain. Of course, there is also the twist at the end that I admit to having guessed if not having all the details figured out.

I do not see Brown’s book being shrouded in controversy similar to his previous books.  They do include some premises that the founding fathers did not fashion our country and government on Christian principals as much as the desire to be recognized as gods themselves.  An overshadowing theme throughout the book of new age thinking that we all within ourselves have godlike potential and a positive plug for Masonic principals of  moving beyond traditional religion so as to “harness our true power. Brown’s works keep putting religion in critical light as he explores issues between science and religion.

He said:

In Dan Brown’s latest book, The Lost Symbol, we see the return of Professor of Iconology, Robert Langdon who was convinced into traveling to Washington D.C. on very short notice, only to become involved in another mystery involving, religion, symbols, lunatic bad guys, and puzzles apparently only he is able to solve.

The book was a very fast-paced and exciting read. I have enjoyed Dan Brown’s storytelling skills in past novels, and this story is definitely no disappointment. I do not want to give away any of the story or its deeper secrets, but I will say if you could imagine a story that mixes National Treasure and The DaVinci Code, then you now pretty much have an idea where The Lost Symbol is going to take you.

During the time I spent reading this book, I longed to return to Washington D.C. so I could revisit all of the places Dan Brown described and see the symbols he was mentioning in person. Although there were times you felt that Brown was just going through a list of urban myths and other conspiracy theories dealing with the building of Washington D.C., he did a great job neatly bringing everything together into a fun ride.

Now, I will be honest and say that from a philosophical, theological, or even rational perspective, I do not agree with much Dan Brown preaches in his works, and specifically the rhetoric he presents in the Lost Symbol. That being said, I was very disappointed that after the story was “complete” and “resolved”, Brown felt the need to go into over 45 pages of nonsense and wild theories and beliefs. I could definitely have used that reading time more wisely, like closing the book and going to sleep.

All in all, Lost Symbol was a good story, with fun characters, and interesting mysteries and puzzles. Discounting Dan Brown’s need to express his beliefs so blatantly during the last 45 ages of the book  as a huge disappointment, but overall a job well done for Mr. Brown.

GENRE: Suspense/ Mystery

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Dead Until Dark – He Said, She Said

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Men and women think and read different.  We decided to do a he said/she said between the creator of Storybuzz, Danielle, and her humble tech guy, Marty to demonstrate and entertain through a classic example of the battle of the sexes.  The book we chose is Dead Until Dark, by Charlaine Harris.  Please let us know if you enjoy this type of he said/she said review style.

 

HE SAID

Dead Until Dark is the first book in the Southern Vampire Mysteries series by Charlaine Harris. I was introduced to this book while learning about a popular show on HBO called True Blood. The premise of the show and the book sounded interesting. Although, I will say, True Blood is definitely not a family show and after the first half of the first episode, I realized that it is probably not a show I will continue watching. But hey, this is a review about the book, right.

Anyways, where to start. The book is narrated by its main character, Sookie Stackhouse. A telepathic, bar waitress, living in a small Louisiana town, Bon Temps. Recently, vampires came “out of the coffin” and are now living among us regular mortal folk. In fact, the vampires are also fighting for civil rights, which to me is the most interesting part of the story.  Sookie meets one of these vampires, Bill, who comes into the bar she works at and she is immediately drawn to him. First, she is more curious about meeting a vampire, but later she finds out there is something special about Bill that draws her to him even more, but of course I am trying to stay away from spoilers here. Other characters include:

Jason – Sookie’s promiscuous (well sex-crazed) brother.

Sam – the owner of Merlotte’s and Sookie’s boss

Eric – an older, more powerful vampire

Along with a host of other Bon Temps locals.

I realize that this is the first book in a very successful series, however, I have to ask myself “why?’. The premise of humans and vampires falling in love, a la Twilight, has been done at nauseam. The most interesting part of the story, in my estimation, about the vampires fighting discrimination, is a brief and glossed over part of the story and the characters are just dull.

Sookie starts out as a strong character with what appears to be strong moral values, or at least a romantics view of who should be her first “love” and ends up as, what I can best describe as,  Bills plaything with an attitude. Sam shows sparks of being interesting but really he is no different than any other third part of a love triangle.

I would have to say that people truly need to be desperate for something to read, or this series must get a whole lot better in later books,  in order for me to understand the success of this series.

SHE SAID

Charlaine Harris’ Dead Until Dark, is the first in the author’s popular Southern Vampire Mysteries series. It is safe to say that this book was a fun, breezy read that won’t win any fiction prizes. I did like how it took a new approach and spin to the life of the modern vampire.

In recent years, since Buffy The Vampire Slayer retired from television a subgenre of fantasy/horror/romance fiction has emerged, and Harris is one of many authors finding a lucrative niche on an old tale. She drops the melodrama of vampire lore and tells a tongue in cheek story of a feisty, telepathic waitress who thinks the man of her dreams could be a vampire.

The main protagonist in Dead Until Dark is a 25-year-old high school-educated Louisiana waitress named Sookie Stackhouse who lives with her grandma and just happens to be able to read minds which has complicated not just her love life but her ability to keep a job.

What originally motivated me to read this series was what I had hoped would be a more explored theme of the book. Vampires have in recent years “come out of the coffin” and joined mainstream society, mostly because a Japanese biomedical group has created synthetic blood substitute called True Blood.  (Also the name of the HBO series based on Harris’ series.)  I was rally intrigued by the idea of vampires trying to justify their place in society, the idea that being a vampire was now seen as a virus and the political landscape of vampires in office and lobbying for rights.  Maybe a book about all that will be released in the future because that was not what Dead Until Dark was about.

Instead, Sookie falls more in love with her vampire Bill-the only creature whose thoughts she can’t read and is drawn more into the creepy vampire culture as she tries to solve the case of why all her friends and co-workers are being murdered.

Where Harris really shines is in drafting a very entertaining cast. Sookie’s telepathy lets Harris instantly explain every character’s internal motivations–a great literary trick. The cast includes the womanizing yet well-meaning brother, suspicious and prejudiced sheriff, or standoffish yet protective (supernatural) boss and a killer who comes out of nowhere.

This book is a quick, entertaining beach read offering a quick dose of the supernatural.  Every book in the series which currently contains 8 books finds our heroine in a love triangle.  I do want to caution there are some explicit love scenes although nothing to the level of the HBO mini-series. 

The next original Sookie Stackhouse novel will be on sale in May 2010.

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