- For such riveting prose (Langdon has just learned that he is to be accused of murder and is trying to escape from the museum):
Langdon looked displeased. "I'll meet you there on one condition," he replied, his voice stern.
(I still get goosebumps when I read this)
She paused, startled. "What's that?"
"That you stop calling me Mr. Langdon."
(Sophie) felt herself smile back. - Sophie's grandmother and brother are living in Scotland in a well-known place, one that Sophie would very likely visit in her professional capacity, and yet she has no idea about them.
- After dispelling the reader's suspicions that Sophie might have a royal bloodline, finally revealing that the reader's suspicions were in fact well-founded. That was indeed a cheap trick to pull.
- For going out of the way to stay on the right side of Opus Dei, while using them as a whipping boy.
- Dude, why don't you decide once and for all whether you are a suspense thriller writer or a Simon Singh wannabe?
Saturday, March 04, 2006
Five reasons why I think The Da Vinci Code is a piece of crap
[Warning: spoilers ahead if you are one of the lucky few who have not yet read the book]