The Lost Symbol
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Are any of you tired of the same "Dan Brown formula"?
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Deanne
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Apr 03, 2013 02:08PM

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P.S. I absolutely adore them.







The typical Langdon novel is like: Langdon finds himself in a difficult situation/case, he meets pretty girl (will be his sidekick slash semi-love interest for the entire novel), insert architectural tour of some place, big plot twist slash betrayal, separate ways with girl.
It can be too much sometimes especially if you read one novel after the other, but I think the greatest negative here (at least for me) is that the story can be a bit predictable. Like, say, in Inferno I was able to guess the plot twist from early on. It can have that kind of effect to some readers.
If you get tired of his formula, then I'm sure you won't last long with Nicholas Sparks. I think he has a more redundant formula than this one.





Just finished Inferno a few days ago. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that nobody ended up being anybody else's relative. I was CERTAIN from the beginning that Sienna would be the genetically engineered child of Elizabeth (who of course was sterile) and Zobrist (who of course specialized in creating genetically modified humans.) And I was certain that she would have been engineered to be immune to the plague. I was almost disappointed that this didn't happen, but equally glad that I didn't guess the ending at the very beginning based on that assumption.
I was UNpleasantly surprised to learn that the whole "trying to kill me" thing was one big hoax. WEAK. LOL But hey, I didn't see it coming. So again, that's a good thing.
So in short, there was more than one surprise this time around for me. Much less "formulaic" IMO

WORD. Me too.
The most annoying thing (IMO) is being able to predict the ending because that's how the previous books ended.


Yes, I agree with that statement. It is definitely a Dan Brown novel, but it's not the SAME Dan Brown novel in a different book jacket LOL

I don't know what is upsetting everyone so much, I mean read Erle Gardner Stanley's book they have formulae and there must be like at least 50 such books, P.G.Wodehouse is an amazing and humor author but there is not necessarily a plot in his books. Its mostly Jeeves one upping everyone else. Look at all romance novels a cute &/or pretty girl a powerful or passionate guy...it goes on and on..

I can't think of another plot outline for Brown's mystery novels. There's always a mystery, a professor, a beautiful woman, a chase on a beautiful city, and a thought-provoking concept.
Even though I knew this was gonna be the same for Inferno, I still bought it. To me, finding out the mystery alone is worth it.





If you are not pushing yourself as a writer to try something different, then you're really not thinking outside the box.
I want to read novels that are character-driven, NOT plot-driven. Tell me more about Professor Langdon so we can all relate to him, Mr. Brown! In ALL FOUR of his Langdon novels, Brown has told us that Langdon wears a Mickey Mouse watch and that he has claustrophobia. OK, WE GET IT! TELL ME SOMETHING ELSE ABOUT HIM!
Brown does excellent research, but he REALLY needs to develop his characters more... a LOT more.



I agree. I hope that, if Robert Langdon series will have more books, I want to see some twists and changes.


speak for yourself after TLS his latest is a vast improvement imho.


However , I read deception point and it's was not as oustanding as the others .. Maybe asking Dan to change his style will push him to abandon his amzing style !

First off let me say that the story is captivating and the subject matter interesting. A very fast past read. HOWEVER:
(I'm goi..."
A.R. wrote: "This was my review for the book back in 2009, I think it says it all:
First off let me say that the story is captivating and the subject matter interesting. A very fast past read. HOWEVER:
(I'm goi..."
I agree with what you have to say in your spoiler section...It made me think about it too...Why is he being so skeptic when that's seriously no time to be...I felt that part dragging the story a bit...but I guess we can forgive him for that...

I love Dan Brown books, and you are right about the formula, but still it's the whole adventure, secret seeking journey that keeps you attached to those books and you forget that you were even worried about almost-the-same beginnings and endings in each book. Though I agree that a little variety would be much better.

The stories are based on a formula, but the storytelling is still good and suspenseful. Overall, his system works, and I respect that for what it is.
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