Showing posts with label Angels and Demons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angels and Demons. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Javier Sierra--The Secret Supper and The Lady in Blue

Photo:  The incorrupt body of Venerable María de Jesús de Ágreda in the Church of the Conceptionists Convent (in Ágreda, Spain).  Photo taken from Maria de Jesus de Agreda's Wikipedia page.

Javier Sierra is probably one of the more successful authors, world-wide, who you've never heard of.  I've only read two of his works; they may be the only two of his translated into English.  They're reviewed below.

The Secret Supper

No Da Vinci Code redux, as a commenter inside says, and it's true.  Very good book about everything associated to its time.  A bestseller in 35 countries, this book delves into the characters more than Code, with just as much suspense and with just as many cliffhangers.  And the added bonus of historical accuracy and a You-Are-There feel.  Sierra has yet to repeat this success, unlike Brown and Angels and Demons (which might be better than Code).  This is a worthwhile book and intelligent escapism.

The Lady in Blue

Disappointing, but not terrible.  Made me want to see images of the nun who, though in her crypt, still looks alive.  Very, very creepy.  Interesting question about how the true Americans knew the religion beforehand, though I can think of other, more plausible, answers.  Very second-rate compared to Sierra's own The Secret Supper, and sometimes kinda bland.  He'll do better.  Very successful book, translated into 23 languages, as was The Secret Supper

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Dan Brown's Robert Langdon Trilogy (So Far)

Photo: Da Vinci's The Last Supper.  Go to the back of the class if you didn't know that.  But don't be ashamed if you didn't know that the real name is Cenacolo.  You didn't expect a guy who spoke Italian and Latin to name his painting in English, did you?  Did you?!?


A couple of comments on Dan Brown's Robert Langdon Trilogy:

Angels and Demons:

Maybe better than Code.  One of the better 1-2 punches in recent literary history.  I wish the public could've let Umberto Eco or Iain Pears do the same for the genre, but at least someone put the genre on the map.  I'll bet the better writers like Eco and Pears benefited from Brown's success.  Creepy bad guy, and Brown shows how pace and history/description (with the occasional hysterically false entertainment) can be done.  Again, like Code and Harry Potter, it made non-readers want to read.  That's good enough.

And the Annotated Angels and Demons is even more cool.  Buy it, and Google the interesting stuff.  It's like having Wikipedia in a cliffhanger book.  You know how you read some books for the recipes, or for things that have nothing to do with the story or writing?  Read this stuff for the interesting artwork, (occasionally correct) history, and real-life historical people, and then Wikipedia them or Google them.  I'm nerdy like that.

The Annotated Da Vinci Code:

Much cooler than just the novel alone.  Great pictures of artwork a must to see what Langdon was seeing.  Good page-turning pot-boiler that isn't meant to be more than it is.  Intelligently gripping, though not quite intellectual.  Nice Gnostic touches, though, and a little bit of common sense never hurts.  The intelligent reader will be able to sift through the material and separate nuggets of intelligent coolness from the hysterically false entertainment.  Made non-readers want to read, so what's not to like about that?  Cardboard characterization a la Crichton, but the best of its type.  Angels and Demons may be better.

I repeat the Wikipedia/Google comments here.

The Annotated Lost Symbol:

Disappointing sequel, but anything really was going to be after such mega-sales from the previous two.  Made me see D.C. in a different way, though I knew much of the history in the book already.  Didn't know about the creepy, Washington-as-God painting.  Googled it--really weird.  But the most disappointing thing about it is how Brown (aka Langdon) immediately backed down from the controversy Code made about the Church.  (SPOILER!)  Third-person POV says that Langdon was surprised at the public's occasional vitriol towards him because of the controversy "he" made by publishing "his" book about what happened, but, hey, c'mon, Brown wasn't TOTALLY off-base, and it helped make the Vatican at least a little culpable about the other, more real and modern-day problems it has.  It all made some people (outside Bible-belt America, apparently) doubt and take a step back--and actually think for a moment.  What's wrong with that?  Don't back away from that!  Be proud of it!  Weak "author intrusion" made an already-disappointing book worse.  Put a bad taste in my mouth about it.  ::sigh::