The Lost Word
Cached from Amazon.com on Sept. 4, 2011—
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Excruciating. January 12, 2010
Steven Diamond "Elitist Book
Reviews"
This review is from: The Lost Symbol (Dan Brown) (Hardcover)
Have you ever had that burning sensation in your chest? No, not
heart-burn. More deadly (if possible) than that. I mean the feeling
when you are reading a novel, watching a movie, or playing a video game
and you get SO impatient for it to move along. You start clenching your
jaw. You crack your knuckles again, even though you just cracked them
two minutes earlier. The feeling that is the perfect mix of annoyance
and impatience burns in you. That's what reading THE LOST SYMBOL is
like. It is excruciating. Yes. Excruciating...that is the word of
choice to explain Dan Brown's latest "novel." (Dear Dan Brown: Thank
you for kindly putting the words, "A Novel" on the front cover of your
book. Without them, I would have mistaken this book for a slush-pile
reject.)
What a terrible, terrible book.
Six years ago, Dan Brown caused all sorts of controversy with his novel
THE DA VINCI CODE. It sold a bajillion copies, and forced the whole
"Religious Conspiracy" sub-genre into focus. It was also a really
poorly written novel. I have read all of Dan Brown's work. From DIGITAL
FORTRESS to the newly printed THE LOST SYMBOL, Dan Brown manages to do
one thing with remarkable consistency:
Become a worse writer with each novel.
Don't worry, this novel is totally different from the prior two Langdon
novels. See, Langdon goes to a famous national building, and receives a
cryptic phone call about how he needs to solve a mystery that only
LANGDON can solve! He then discovers a bloody clue in the middle of the
building. Following a train of interweaving clues about the Freemasons,
Langdon is joined by his lovely female companion, Kathleen, as they
chase--or are they chased by?--the eeeeeevil Mal'akh. What they
discover will change EVERYTHING! Nothing is as it seems...
Oh wait. Everything is exactly as it seems, because this is the same
plot at ANGELS & DEMONS and THE DA VINCI CODE. America: what is
wrong with you?
Robert Langdon. He marveled us with his professorial skills in, what I
consider the only enjoyable Langdon book, ANGELS & DEMONS. A
lot has changed since that novel. In THE LOST SYMBOL, Langdon--in his
third "adventure"--has managed to become dense and narrow-minded. He
seems incapable of putting his famed intellect to use during the novel,
and is relegated to responding to ANY question or situation with a
bewildered, "What?!" Now before you ask, yes, the "?!" is actually used
in the novel at least two or three times per chapter (there are 133
chapters...you do the math). If you have to use more than one
punctuation type at the end of a sentence, the only thing you are
showing the reader is that you have no real writing ability. Young
writers take note.
Amidst the endless repetitive descriptions, we as readers are made to
suffer an endless stream of "telling" instead of "showing." The few
times Brown manages to "show" us what is going on, he immediately
precedes or follows it by telling us the exactly same thing. It became
so infuriating, that by Chapter 9 I wanted to gouge my eyes out. To
illustrate another example of formulaic writing that Brown has become
famous for, here is his Dialogue Formula:
Person 1: "Have you heard of [insert topic here]?"
Person 2: "No, what is it?"
Person 1: "[insert poorly veiled information dump here]"
Person 2: "I don't understand."
Person 1: "[insert the exact same explanation for a second time]"
Person 2: "So what you are saying is [insert 3rd identical
explanation]"
Person 1: "No, you aren't listening. What I said was [insert 4th
explanation-100% identical to the previous 3 explanations]"
Person 2: "Ah, I see."
Person 1: "Good. Now have you heard of [insert topic here]?"
Repeat all steps for as many filler pages as needed. Seriously.
How about pacing? Brown is known for his pacing isn't he? Two things
here. First, his pacing is false. In order to create this false sense
of "break-neck speed," he ends each chapter on a cliff-hanger. I felt
like there should have been a voice-over saying "dun-dun-DUUUN" playing
as you turned the last page of every chapter. When Brown finally DOES
manage to build up some sort of pace, he ruins it with a flashback.
In a particularly boring flashback early on (in the first few
chapters), Langdon is RUSHING to give a speech (he only has THREE
MINUTES TO GET THERE!), and he lapses into a flashback. In addition to
bringing the pace to a screeching halt, we see, in an academic setting,
that Langdon is supposed to be INSANELY smart. SO MUCH BETTER THAN
EVERYONE! His students believe and hang on every word, no matter how
ridiculous. So, if he is so smart, why is he such an idiot later, and
so slow on the uptake? Why does he have to be told everything like he
is a mentally deficient high-school student? The answer? Dan Brown's
writing is so poor that this is the only way he knows how to express
himself, and these sections serve as a vehicle for information dumps.
It is also humorous that a security guard, early on in the story, makes
the exact same observation of Langdon. Pro Tip: If the characters you
are writing think your main PoV is stupid, so will the readers. This
will undermine your work.
Logic flaws aside (if I stopped to mention all of them, I would be
transcribing the full novel), and forgetting the PoV switching
problems, one of the main problems is the plethora of clichés. We have
the super-secret division of the CIA, and she is a four-foot tall Asian
woman with a superiority complex. And she is deformed. How about the
damsel in distress that is the target of a hideously disfigured
super-villain? Yep, THE LOST SYMBOL has that too. Even James Bond
movies have finally moved beyond these clichés.
I would be remiss if I didn't talk about the villain of the novel.
Never-mind that his big reveal at the end of the novel is telegraphed
from the moment certain characters are introduced. I don't want to talk
about that. I want to talk about this:
How to Build a Cliché Villain the Dan Brown Way
1) Fall for every trick that the dumb hero/heroine throws at you.
2) After being outwitted somehow, point menacingly at the hero/heroine.
3) If you can manage, be a religious fanatic of some sort.
4) Tell the hero/heroine all your secret plans and/or your secret past
in a dramatic moment.
5) Think--at least 3 times early in the novel--that destiny is guiding
you. Feel free to think this up until the moment you are killed due to
your stupidity (see point #8 below)
6) Make the hero/heroine think that they killed you years ago. It makes
your entrance much more dramatic...especially when combined with point
#4 above.
7) When given the opportunity, study yourself naked in a body-length
mirror.
8) Don't actually kill the hero/heroine when you have the chance. Leave
them to be discovered so they can come kill you later. Be sure to act
surprised later when they show up.
9) Have a super-secret lair within your home--preferably hidden by a
secret door. However, the key element here is to leave obvious evidence
for people to find so they can enter the lair and discover all your
plans in case they didn't catch them in point #4 above.
No, seriously, this all happens in THE LOST SYMBOL.
Don't worry citizens, Robert Langdon is here to save the day. Will he
stun us with his intellect? Of course not. He WILL however use his
experiences from prior novels to solve everything with the trusty
anagram. And when that fails, blind luck will do, as will an
epiphany--nothing will trigger the epiphany other than Brown deciding
it is time to move the story along to the next idiotic conversation
(see above formula).
Are you getting the drift here? Dan Brown's THE LOST SYMBOL should
never have been printed. The writing skill is sub-6th Grade level, and
his story is contrived and cliché. An interesting observation: When you
talk to most people who have read Brown's Robert Langdon novels, they
almost always like the first one they read most. Why? Because it is the
same plot over and over again. It is like the mystery version of a
Harlequin Romance Novel. So, it shouldn't be any surprise that this
third novel is even worse. IT'S THE SAME NOVEL...AGAIN! Of course, when
you stop to think about what the "Big Problem" was that everyone in the
novel was trying to prevent, you realize just how terrible the "novel"
is. So. Absurd.
Don't read this book. Ever. Wait for the inevitable movie. It has NO
CHOICE but to be better than the novel. If you really want to know
about all the Freemason stuff, go get a non-fiction book or two about
them. They will be better paced, and more entertaining than THE LOST
SYMBOL.