![]() Brown's writing isn't terribly good by most literary standards seems to be rather beside the point with most readers, and I suppose there's something to be said about that. Brown with his in-depth research excells in Concept, and does a fairly good job at the Conflict part, even if this comes primarily externally and never affects nor derives from Character development. A novel that will sell well has to have at least one great strength in the Concept, Character, Conflict triad, and Mr. Brown should write these books as non-fiction, that's neither there nor here for me. Contrast this with Dan Silva's Ariel Allon series, which you can read out of order but will be sorry you did so in light of how Allon develops as a person from book to book.Īs for the one point or two about whether Mr. As others have noted, since Dan Brown does not do much by way of character development, the order you read these books doesn't terribly matter. As others have noted, Angels and Demons comes before the Da Vinci Code both in its release date and in the chronological sequence of Robert Langdon's exploits. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |