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| Angels and Demons: Special Illustrated Collector's Edition | 
enlarge | Author: Dan Brown Publisher: Bantam Press Category: Book
List Price: £20.00 Buy Used: £6.93 You Save: £13.07 (65%)
New (17) from £10.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 373 reviews Sales Rank: 20769
Media: Hardcover Edition: New edition Pages: 464 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.8 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 8.2 x 1.4
ISBN: 0593054865 EAN: 9780593054864 ASIN: 0593054865
Publication Date: May 10, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk Review It takes guts to write a novel that combines an ancient secret brotherhood, the Swiss Conseil Europeen pour la Recherche Nucleaire, a papal conclave, mysterious ambigrams, a plot against the Vatican, a mad scientist in a wheelchair, particles of anti-matter, jets that can travel 15,000 miles per hour, crafty assassins, a beautiful Italian physicist and a Harvard professor of religious iconology. It takes talent to make that novel anything but ridiculous. Kudos to Dan Brown (Digital Fortress) for achieving the nearly impossible. Angels and Demons is a no-holds-barred, pull-out-all-the-stops, breathless tangle of a thriller--think Katherine Neville's The Eight (but cleverer) or Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum (but more accessible). Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon is shocked to find proof that the legendary secret society, the Illuminati--dedicated since the time of Galileo to promoting the interests of science and condemning the blind faith of Catholicism--is alive, well, and murderously active. Brilliant physicist Leonardo Vetra has been murdered, his eyes plucked out and the society's ancient symbol branded upon his chest. His final discovery, anti-matter, the most powerful and dangerous energy source known to man, has disappeared--only to be hidden somewhere beneath Vatican City on the eve of the election of a new pope. Langdon and Vittoria, Vetra's daughter and colleague, embark on a frantic hunt through the streets, churches and catacombs of Rome, following a 400-year-old trail to the lair of the Illuminati, to prevent the incineration of civilisation. Brown seems as much juggler as author--there are lots and lots of balls in the air in this novel, yet Brown manages to hurl the reader headlong into an almost surreal suspension of disbelief. While the reader might wish for a little more sardonic humour from Langdon and a little less bombastic philosophising on the eternal conflict between religion and science, these are less fatal flaws than niggling annoyances--readers should have no trouble skimming past them and immersing themselves in a heck of a good read. "Brain candy" it may be, but it's tasty. --Kelly Flynn, Amazon.com
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| Customer Reviews: Read 368 more reviews...
Was he joking? - No stars! November 7, 2008 Ok, I am bit depressed and the only books I can read must be easy to grasp, so I cannot say I did not enjoy "Angels and demons". However the mistakes in Italian are appalling!!! A good writer and a good publishing house would have certainly asked a native Italian speaker to check the sentences. Sadly, this did not happen. Not to mention some plain ignorance (Raffaello Santi?? I don't think so!) and some remarkable lack of cultural awareness (a Swiss Guard who calls a Cardinal "Signore", anyone?) that make this book almost disrespectful towards its readers. As an Italian myself, I am surprised nobody noticed these mistakes before the book was published. But I am glad to know that us Italian women can still be attractive despite not being conventionally beautiful. I am still laughing. I think he deserves no stars and the book will be given back to the charity shop. They need the money more than Dan Brown.
Dan Browns best October 22, 2008 This for me was a much better book than the da Vinci code, but never grabbed the headlines as it is not so controversial. The same main character as the da Vinci code, and the same style but in my view better written, with a much better plot.
Very similar to The Davinci Code October 3, 2008 As soon as I had read the first page of this book I wanted to put it down.... forever. It is identical to The Davinci Code. But I forced myself to read it and in time became hooked. Dan Brown obviously researches historical fact thoroughly. However, he lets himself down with the action sequences which are, in places, ridiculous. I won't give the story away but planes cannot travel at 15,000 miles per hour and people cannot survive falling out of a helicopter without a parachute 2 miles up in the air. Also the action is very cliched and at times you are left thinking not only would that not happen but people would simply not behave or react that way. This all adds up to a book of two sides. Dan Brown sucks you into a plausible, interesting and clever plot and the next it all becomes a little too silly. If you loved the Davinci Code then give it a try, otherwise you may as well forget it.
Breath-taking September 21, 2008 Its all been said already - in my opinion the best STORY ive ever read. Yes the writing isnt world class, but the story and pace are like nothing ive ever read before, and i thought the ending was crazily out of this world. For sheer fans of story telling, this cant be beaten. Yes it might stretch the imagination but the details, research and characters are amazing. In awe of the story - how on earth did he come up with the mother of all twists at the end?!!!!!!!!
like the clock that struck 13 ... August 18, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
An entertaining read, though the last quarter gets tiresomely silly.
I would have admired Mr Brown's much-vaunted 'extensive research', and the ingenuity with which he constructs his plot around the topography of Rome (of which I am ignorant), except that in the one area in which I do know a little, he makes such astonishing errors that I cannot take seriously anything else he holds out as fact. Two examples:
1. Yoga, he says, is 'a Buddhist art'. No, it isn't. Its Hindu roots go back hundreds of years before the Buddha lived.
2. More astonishingly, our revered professor of symbology is of the opinion that Chritianity 'borrowed' the concept of the Eucharist (partaking of the body and blood of God) from the Aztecs. Now you can possibly argue that the origins of the eucharist lie in ancient Egypt, or maybe even the Roman cult of Mithras, but the Aztecs? Not only did Aztec culture flourish two continents and a fairly large ocean away from Jerusalem - it only arose about 1100 years after Christianity, by which time the Church had been celebrating the Eucharist, with full transubstatiational theology, for at least 800 years.
If Mr Brown can include errors so basic that 10 minutes on Wikipedia would correct them, what other howlers underlie his book? Of course it's fiction, but not as anchored in the real world as the author would have us believe.
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