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I did learn some things although I think it is rather supperficial. It is more or less a repetitive dictionary on the subjects of the book. It references to some seemingly interestin A good book I am certain, to read alongside "The Da Vinci Code", not so much on it's own. I guess if you didn't know anything about the Templars, Jesus' story, or the Priory of Sion and/or aren't sure about what is true and what isn't in Dan Brown's novel then this is worth buying as an introduction to this subjects. It was fine to skim, but I don't think I'll keep it.moreĪ good book I am certain, to read alongside "The Da Vinci Code", not so much on it's own. So that kind of raised some red flags for me, and I wasn't sure how much of the rest of this book to believe.īut it's also just a reference-type book, so it didn't really add anything that I either 1) didn't already know 2) didn't get from the other tDVC books I've been reading 3) couldn't get from the context of tDVC 4) couldn't find on Wikipedia. It just seemed odd to me that all of the other books that mention PP are very "NO! NO! HOAX! HOAX! LIES!" and Cox makes the PP/PoS story sound more true. The rest say Plantard is/was a fake Cox seems to either sound like it's 100% true, or is slightly, very slightly, hesitant/wishy-washy about it. Maybe it's because the author of this book seems to take a completely different tone about Pierre Plantard and the Priory of Sion than the authors of the other tDVC books take.
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It's basically an encyclopedia for some of the people, characters, ideas, and places that are referred to in The Da Vinci Code.īut it feels. not my favorite of the tDVC-related books I've read.
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The rest say Plantard is/was a fake Cox seems to either sound like it's 100% true, or is slightly, very s Hmmm. It's basically an encyclopedia for some of the people, characters, ideas, and places that are referred to in The Da Vinci Code. With this A to Z guide at hand, readers can separate fact from fiction, examine fully annotated reproductions of the paintings featured in the novel, get background information on the key characters, and discover the amazing true story.more Cracking the Da Vinci Code is the first book to cut through the confusion and disclose the real facts that underpin the plot. Yet despite the novel’s enormous success, till now fans have had to rely on the fierce debates raging on the Internet to discover the truth behind the fiction. Columbia Pictures is bringing out the film of the book in 2005, and Ron Howard ( A Beautiful Mind) is directing, with Russell Crowe and Kate Beckinsale set to play the leads. It has since been translated into more than 40 languages and 5.5 million copies are now in print. The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown took America by storm when it was published in 2003, hitting number 1 on the New York Times bestseller list in its first week of sale. The millions of readers who loved The Da Vinci Code have been looking for the truth behind the fiction: here it is.