


Because, often enough, it’s possible to foresee the plotline based not on what an author writes as on what he doesn’t write. Although there were many surprises in store for me in the book’s final chapters, I’d already figured out some of the fast ones Brown was going to pull as he thundered toward the climax. Inferno (Robert Langdon #4) by Dan Brown ★★★☆☆ And I couldn’t wait to get to the end of The Da Vinci Code because the historical mystery was brilliant and the suspense was excruciating. Brown’s early novels- Digital Fortress and Deception Point-were fascinating to me. And I even found the suspense in the first couple of them to be compelling. OK, admittedly, I’ve read all those Dan Brown novels. And whatever else you might say about The Da Vinci Code and its successors in the Robert Langdon series, lots of people read them.įar be it from me to advance some psychosexual explanation for this surprising phenomenon. What can you say about a man who has sold more than 200 million copies of just six novels? Clearly, the guy has got something going for him.
