Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Dan Brown returns after 6 year wait
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
Yahoo! Search
Search:
Sign InNew User? Sign Up
News Home -
Help
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Asia Pacific
World
Search
Search:
Dan Brown returns after 6 year wait
By HILLEL ITALIE,AP National Writer AP - Wednesday, September 16
NEW YORK - The mind of Dan Brown may be a cluster of codes, but in person he appears no more mysterious than your average tennis partner. He is that smiling, sandy-haired man with the dimpled chin you know from the jacket flap of "The Da Vinci Code," the sporty looking fellow in blazer and slacks.
ADVERTISEMENT
After six years of letting his work do the talking _ a conversation that whispered and screamed across the globe _ he is back, at least briefly, to promote his new novel, "The Lost Symbol," and to reflect on how "The Da Vinci Code" changed him from unknown thriller writer to a symbol in his own right.
"I wouldn't trade it for the world," he says, seated on a recent morning in a sunlit conference room at the headquarters of Random House, Inc. "It's 95 percent wonderful. My life is much more multifaceted. My experiences have gotten to be much more interesting, the people I get to meet, the discussions I get to have."
The book is done and he beams like a father, "so pleased this day has arrived." His publisher has blessed "The Lost Symbol," with a first printing of 5 million, oversized for virtually any writer except Brown, whose sales for "The Da Vinci Code" top 40 million. "The Lost Symbol" has been at or near the top of Amazon.com's best-seller list since the novel was announced in the spring.
The long wait for his new book, he says, is mostly due to the story, "mindboggling stuff" which required time to master. In "The Lost Symbol," protagonist Robert Langdon returns from his European adventures of "The Da Vinci Code." He has been summoned to Washington, D.C., and is quickly caught up in a fateful race against a murderous villain to find a hidden code that supposedly unearths an ancient secret to limitless knowledge and power.
Like "The Da Vinci Code," the new book is thriller, puzzler, research paper and travelogue. Langdon hurries about from the Library of Congress to the National Archives to the Washington Monument, a capsule of the journeys Brown took in working on the novel, traveling first class all the way, like receiving personal tours of the Library of Congress and other buildings.
"Those things wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for `The Da Vinci Code,'" he notes.
Library spokesman Matt Raymond confirmed that Brown had visited in April 2008 and had looked over some Bibles in the library's collection. He also met for about 30 minutes with Librarian of Congress James Billington for a "private discussion."
Fame's unwonderful 5 percent is the kind that other major celebrities face: a loss of privacy that Brown says makes it impossible to tour for his new book, a heightened self-awareness that briefly, just a couple of months, he says, made it hard for him to write "The Lost Symbol."
He was also delayed by the 2006 copyright infringement trial in which writers Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh claimed Brown's book "appropriated the architecture" of their own work. Brown and Random House prevailed.
"That was certainly a setback, mainly because it was a distraction and all that the energy that goes into a trial is not going into your work," he says. "The worst part of it was having someone question my integrity, publicly."
He was attacked often for "The Da Vinci Code," especially for alleging that Jesus and Mary Magdalene conceived a child. Scholars scorned him, and religious officials were offended, but Brown stands by his theory, finding it "makes more sense than the story I was told in church."
Brown's new book is centered on the Freemasons, the secretive, centuries-old fraternity that has included George Washington, Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman. He has great respect for the Masons, especially for their policy of accepting people of all religious faiths. But he wouldn't be surprised if someone gets angry.
"There will be a lot said, not all of it will be nice," he says. "And I'm just kind of used to it."
He doesn't talk to a lot to the press, but Brown's history is as known as most authors' thanks in part to a mini-biography he never wished to produce _ a 69-page court document submitted for the London trial.
He was born in 1964 in Exeter, N.H., and still lives near there. His father, Richard Brown, taught math at Exeter Phillips Academy. His mother, Constance Brown, was a musician. The first treasure hunts he knew were the ones his father arranged at Christmas.
Brown majored in English at Amherst College, but also liked music enough to debate after graduating whether he should write stories or songs. Choosing songs, he moved to Los Angeles and caught on with no one except for the woman who became his wife, Blythe Newlon, the director of artistic development for the National Academy of Songwriters.
As a young man, he compiled a list of "187 Men to Avoid," which proved amusing enough for the Berkeley Publishing Group to release as a book, in 1995, under the pseudonym "Danielle Brown." But his real breakthrough came two years earlier, on a vacation in Tahiti, when he read Sidney Sheldon's "The Doomsday Conspiracy."
"It held my attention, kept me turning pages, and reminded me how much fun it could be to read," Brown wrote in his court papers. "The simplicity of the prose and the efficiency of the story line was less cumbersome than the dense novels of my schooldays, and I began to suspect that maybe I could write a 'thriller' of this type one day."
He debuted in 1998 with "The Digital Fortress," an intelligence thriller, and followed with "Deception Point" (a novel he found boring to write) and "Angels & Demons," which introduced at least a few readers to Langdon, the Harvard professor embodied for many by Tom Hanks' portrayals in the film versions of "The Da Vinci Code" and "Angels and Demons."
His sales were poor and by 2001 he was in the same rut as so many authors _ handling his own publicity and even selling books out of his car, a process that would now require a convoy of trucks.
Brown changed agents, changed publishers (from Simon & Schuster to Doubleday, a Random House imprint), changed his luck and changed the industry. "The Da Vinci Code," published in March 2003 was an immediate hit that "just parked," Brown says, remaining on best-seller lists for more than three years. He recalls an early sign of success _ an appearance at a superstore in Washington, not longer after the book came out.
"We drove up and the store was just surrounded with people and I thought, `My god, there must have been a bomb scare. What are all these people?' And my handler said, `Those people are here for you.' And maybe that was the moment when I thought, `This is bigger than I expected.'"
Barnes & Noble Inc. fiction buyer Sessalee Hensley says she knew vaguely of Brown before "The Da Vinci Code," but had never read him. Encouraged by a Barnes & Noble executive to try Brown's novel, she was immediately drawn to the "breathless pace, the intrigue _ the science and art were fascinating."
"But I have to say my biggest takeaway from it was that I wanted to know more about everything he wrote about," Hensley says. "I Googled my fingers off! It made me wish I had Robert Langdon or Dan Brown as a professor in my college years!"
Brown is far richer than he was a few years ago, but his working life remains steady, he says. He rises at 4 a.m. and writes until noon, seven days a week, even on Christmas. He is often too drained to read, so instead he will play tennis or go for a run on the beach. Mark Twain's religious critique "Letters from the Earth" is one of the few books he has read for pleasure lately.
Brown will talk and talk about Twain, Masons, pyramids, spirituality ("a work in progress," he says) and e-books (he reads them, and the paper kind, too), but some subjects repel as if were asked to violate a sacred oath. Ask about his next book and he will smile, in a nice way, and change the subject. Ask about politics, and he will cringe.
"The Lost Symbol" doesn't name names, but works in criticisms of waterboarding and religious intolerance, passages that suggest the author was not a fan of the George W. Bush administration.
"The people who have read the book have told me that the timing of the book seems preordained," he says. "And they will cite, among other references, the president (Obama) and the change in attitudes toward religion."
Asked if the book was completed after Obama's election, he answers, thoughtfully, yes. Asked for his opinion of Obama, he declines comment, for the very future of his book.
"What I'm trying to what to do in this book is send a universal message, and the second I pick a side, it just undermines everything," he says, adding that he underwent a "transformation" from working on "The Lost Symbol."
"(It's) really two things. The idea that science is starting to show our true potential and that that potential is so much greater than most of us imagined. ... Tangentially, I feel like we're entering a time where prejudice, prejudice of religion in particular, will start to evaporate."
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Sign in to recommend this article »
0 users recommend
Related Articles: Entertainment & Lifestyle
Critics slam `Leno Show,' call it `Tonight' rehashAP - 1 hour 52 minutes ago
Emmy Countdown: Bacon, Sedgwick among presentersAP - 2 hours 55 minutes ago
More Emmy presenters: Bacon, Sedgwick, GervaisAP - Wednesday, September 16
Freemasons hail Dan Brown's latest novel as "good fun"Reuters - Wednesday, September 16
Prince Harry turns 25AP - Wednesday, September 16
Most Popular – Entertainment
Viewed
Mafia sank boat with radioactive waste: official
Depression harms cancer survival rates: study
Remains of Jesus-era synagogue found in Israel
Obama lashes out at Wall Street
Nestle warns of possible exit from Switzerland
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy
- Terms of Service
- Community
- Intellectual Property Rights Policy
- Help
Other News on Tuesday, 15 September 2009 Bagram inmates can challenge detention: Pentagon
Europe to emerge from recession in 3rd qtr, says EU
US-TECH Summary
Intel restructures, senior exec leaves for EMC
Netanyahu: no complete West Bank building freeze
sells stake in Alibaba.com for 150 mln dlrs
Venezuela inks $2.2 bln weapons deal with Russia
Intuit buying Mint.com for 170 mln dlrs
Kissing quest makes Taiwan woman a web sensation
Norway left wins rare re-election: exit polls
| International
|
Iraqi court orders the release of Bush shoe thrower
Public trust in US media eroding: Pew study
U.S. behind attack on militant in Somalia: U.S. sources
| International
|
Web TV firm Joost ousts Chairman Mike Volpi
Student leader in dock as Iran resumes protesters' trial
Top U.N official to visit Sri Lanka, discuss refugees
| International
|
Dalai Lama briefed about US approach to Tibet
Obama touts Wall St. changes on Lehman anniversary
U.S. NATO envoy says Europeans firm on Afghanistan
Dalai Lama hopes to meet Obama in Nov: statement
Harkin: `Silent majority' back health care reform
Myanmar politicians' kin set to join new party
Obama urges financial industry to rebuild trust
Taiwan coast guard alerted after Japan nabs skipper
US joins UN rights council as member for 1st time
Outgoing Japan PM bids successor 'good luck'
Inspiration for movie 'Norma Rae' dies at 68
Regulators: accounting changes need global reach
New Islamic law in Indonesia's Aceh province
Obama: Some Wall St. firms ignoring Lehman lessons
Classes resume in riot-turn city of Urumqi, China
Indonesia's Aceh passes law on stoning to death
Tenn. ash spill community getting $40M from TVA
China lodges complaint at WTO over US tyre tariffs
Man accused of attacking mayor pleads insanity
Japanese high-tech giants in cellphone merger
Turkmenistan, Russia's Itera sign energy deal
New film Precious gets big push from Oprah
| Entertainment
|
Whitney Houston says mom rescued her from drugs
| Entertainment
|
Correction: Oprah Winfrey story
Winfrey, Tyler Perry push new film `Precious'
'Big Brother' reunion won't have booted contestant
Rocker Juanes' wife gives birth to son in Miami
Apocalypse now? Dark visions at Toronto film festival
| Entertainment
|
'Shakespeare in Love' set to be reborn as theater
World celebrities sing to stop global warming
Intel restructures, senior exec leaves for EMC
Mafia sank boat with radioactive waste: official
Iran agrees date for nuclear talks in move welcomed by US
Top al Qaeda militant killed in Somalia
| International
|
Europe to emerge from recession in 3rd qtr, says EU
U.S. senator promises look into cellphone-cancer link
Iran agrees date for nuclear talks in move welcomed by US
Magna says to cut 10,500 jobs at Opel
Iranian conservative harshly criticises regime
U.S. envoy meets Netanyahu over settlement freeze
| International
|
Broadcom files patent infringement suit against Emulex
Iran's talks with world powers to start next month
Chile to adopt Japanese digital TV standard: Bachelet
Netanyahu says won't freeze building in settlements
Microsoft testing 'Visual Search'
Obama lashes out at Wall Street
Japan cabinet takes shape, Fujii for finance: media
| International
|
New York Times warns readers of website virus
Norway's Stoltenberg set to stay in power
| International
|
UK's Conservatives have 14 point lead: poll
| International
|
U.S. concerned over Venezuela-Russia arms deal
| International
|
U.N. assembly votes for more powerful women's agency
| International
|
Swiss watchdog threatens to sue Google over Street View
US military deaths in Iraq war at 4,344
US military deaths in Afghanistan region at 752
HP shows off new ultra-thin PCs, stylish netbook
| Technology
|
Calif. judge gives ex assistant sheriff 27 months
DC subway worker dies after hit by train last week
3 New York residences raided in terrorism probe
Obama admin fights Bagram detainee court access
Rules on Wilson's outburst open to interpretation
U of Illinois faculty back leaders' ouster
Koreas exchange lists of families separated by war
U.S. senator promises look into cellphone-cancer link
| Technology
|
APNewsBreak: Report says punishment led to killing
Japan cabinet takes shape, Fujii for finance
Defense: Brooke Astor was lucid when changing will
Taiwan sub skipper falls overboard during training
Conservationists say 70 dolphins in Japan released
Classes resume after China syringe attacks
4th Guantanamo detainee agrees to move to Palau
Indonesia's Aceh to allow stoning for adulterers
Malaysian judge hands out 2nd caning for alcohol
Missile kills 4 in Pakistan; 18 die in stampede
US turns over seized prehistoric relics to China
Offshore holdings of NZ govt rise in August
S.Korea T-bonds inch up; eyes on jobs data
Actor Patrick Swayze dead at 57
Seoul shares gain as shipbuilders rally;techs down
S.Korea regulator calls for careful exit
Patrick Swayze dead at 57: report
US seeks fresh look at SKorea auto imports
Lowe, Garner blast Kanye West and 'You lie!' lawmaker
Dirty Dancing star Patrick Swayze dead at 57
| Entertainment
|
Leno launches U.S. prime-time television experiment
| Entertainment
|
Toyota says European demand won't recover till mid-2010
Venice Fest short on prizes for local fare
| Entertainment
|
AES shares rise on report of China interest
Whitney Houston says husband painted evil eyes in house
| Entertainment
|
Lame? Seinfeld stars reunite after 11 years
| Entertainment
|
Kanye West taking time off after debacle
| Entertainment
|
Keanu Reeves hams it up as webisode star
| Entertainment
|
Quentin Tarantino to open Mexican film festival
Actor Patrick Swayze dead at 57
Kiefer Sutherland to head new acting school
| Entertainment
|
New suspect emerges in possible Brian Jones murder
New suspect emerges in possible Brian Jones murder
| Entertainment
|
Marc Jacobs leads pack at NY Fashion Week
New suspect emerges in possible Brian Jones murder
| Entertainment
|
Neil Young taps No Doubt, Chris Martin for benefit
Film star Patrick Swayze dead at 57: reports
Whitney Houston says husband painted evil eyes in house
Lowe, Garner blast Kanye West and 'You lie!' lawmaker
Music world slams Kanye West over awards outburst
Rapper Kanye West taking time off after debacle
Recounts due at 10% of Afghan polling stations
Brown seeks to reassure unions before election
Google launches online news reader 'Fast Flip'
Obama lashes out at Wall Street
Iraqi who threw shoes at Bush released from jail
| International
|
Iraqi shoe thrower released; says he was tortured
Iran says lays ground for more cooperation with IAEA
| International
|
'Dirty Dancing' star Patrick Swayze dead at 57
Afghan recount to cover 10 percent of polling stations
| International
|
Iran nuclear talks probably in Turkey: Solana
One in six Mediterranean mammals face extinction
China says 75 suspects held over far-west needle scare
| International
|
Recounts at 10 percent of Afghan polling stations
Russia's Medvedev says may run in 2012 vote: reports
| International
|
Iran talks likely in Turkey
Chinese schools quietly discard controversial Web filter
| International
|
US lawmakers to quiz military chief on Afghan war
Bagram inmates win right to challenge detention
No more reckless behavior: Obama warns Wall Street
Chinese schools quietly discard controversial Web filter
| Technology
|
Scientists find virtual reality helps relieve pain
| Technology
|
Police: College student kills intruder with sword
Plane crash plotter to appear in Indiana court
A paw and a prayer: Pilots save shelter animals
Obama back on the economy
The Nation's weather
Rights group suspends analyst over Nazi collection
Philippine July remittances surge to 9.3 percent
Iraq shoe-thrower freed, accuses guards of torture
China wants action on IMF at G-20 summit
Pakistan foreign investment falls 36 pct in July-Aug
Taiwan dollar rises on stocks, c.bank caps gains
Japan airline to cut 6,800 jobs and seek tie-up
WRAPUP 2-South Korea says economic support has to stay
San Miguel seeks new business opportunities
SLanka foreign reserves record high: central bank
Seoul shares hit 14-mth closing high; banks gain =2
Prince Harry turns 25
Taiwan's Formosa Plastics plans huge Vietnam port
Dan Brown returns after 6 year wait
Aussie rocker Garrett won't join climate change song
Ukraine dismisses Elton John's adoption bid
Marvel vs. Disney: Two very different Americas
Rightwing Czech hate groups target Roma: report
Indonesia flash floods kill 38: official
No drugs please, we're Singaporean goths
Indonesian rights groups condemn new stoning law
Freemasons hail Dan Brown's latest novel as good fun
| Entertainment
|
Leno launches U.S. prime-time television experiment
Flash floods hit Indonesian village, 25 missing
'Dirty Dancing' star Patrick Swayze dies at 57
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights