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The Lost Symbol: (Robert Langdon Book 3)
 
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The Lost Symbol: (Robert Langdon Book 3) [Versión Kindle]

Dan Brown
3.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas  Ver todas las opiniones (2 opiniones de clientes)

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Contains a sneak preview of Inferno, Dan Brown's astonishing new Robert Langdon thriller.



The Capitol Building, Washington DC: Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon believes he is here to give a lecture. He is wrong. Within minutes of his arrival, a shocking object is discovered. It is a gruesome invitation into an ancient world of hidden wisdom.



When Langdon's mentor, Peter Solomon - prominent mason and philanthropist - is kidnapped, Langdon realizes that his only hope of saving his friend's life is to accept this mysterious summons.



It is to take him on a breathless chase through Washington's dark history. All that was familiar is changed into a shadowy, mythical world in which Masonic secrets and never-before-seen revelations seem to be leading him to a single impossible and inconceivable truth...


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3.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas
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1.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas Avoid it if you can 18 de junio de 2012
Por CarmeRoyo
Formato:Versión Kindle
Repetitive and tedious. How many more books with the same formula will we have to bear? I will not read any more of his books.
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5.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas A teoria da ciência Noética 17 de abril de 2012
Formato:Tapa blanda
O Símbolo Perdido, é o quinto livro de ficção do escritor norte-americano Dan Brown.
O livro aborda a maçonaria nos Estados Unidos e seus vários símbolos ocultos, bem como os fundadores americanos envolvidos com tal irmandade.
O Símbolo Perdido foi lançado, em língua inglesa, em Setembro de 2009 e a edição brasileira em dezembro.
No primeiro dia de vendas o livro vendeu 1 milhão de copias nos Estados Unidos, no Canadá e no Reino Unido.
A demora para o seu lançamento se deu, pelo fato do seu autor, Dan Brown, estar envolvido num processo de plágio juntamente com a sua editora americana. O processo foi movido por dois historiadores britânicos, Michael Baigent e Richard Leigh, que acusavam o escritor de ter copiado a estrutura central de um livro que eles publicaram em 1982, O Santo Graal e a Linhagem Sagrada. Contudo, a sua inocência já foi provada.
Para vocês verem o que é um bom livro: comprei esse e o novo da Stephenie Meyer (The Host), na mesma ocasião, em viagem recente à Disney. Comecei pelo The host. Tentei, tentei, mas não consegui ir além dos 3 primeiros capítulos. Procurei ler a sinopse e nem assim me encantei. Resolvi deixá-lo de lado e pegar o The Lost Symbol. Que diferença! Mal podia esperar para continuar a ler - devorei quase metade, só no primeiro dia de leitura - Adooooooreeeeeeiiiii.
A Teoria da Ciência Noética: Noetics (do grego "mental"), é um ramo da filosofia metafísica que trata do estudo da mente e da intuição, e sua relação com o intelecto divino. Entre seus objetivos principais podem-se citar o estudo de uma forma não-racional de conhecimento e como ela se relaciona com a razão. Na tradição ocidental, a teoria noética foi fortemente influenciada pelas teorias de filósofos como Platão e Aristóteles. Nos dicionários modernos, "noética" é geralmente definido como significando "intelecto", enquanto noesis é traduzida como "insight". Esta prática deriva de filósofos e teólogos medievais que usaram a palavra em latim intellectus - significando "intuição". São Tomas de Aquino, desenvolveu uma teoria da inteligência em sua obra "De unitate intellectus" e "Summa Theologica" de um ponto de vista da filosofia cristã.
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Amazon.com: 3.1 de un máximo de 5 estrellas  3.282 opiniones
2.616 de 2.845 personas piensan que la opinión es útil
3.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas A Fair Review and Some Advice 18 de septiembre de 2009
Por Justin Lee - Publicado en Amazon.com
Formato:Tapa dura
I want to be fair to Dan Brown.

Elitist literary critics say that Brown is not a good writer, and that his stories are bland. I personally think that if you manage to genuinely entertain and awe your audiences, then you have accomplished something worthy of reading. I also think that "The Da Vinci Code" was nearly an impossible act to follow. People will have all sorts of crazy expectations for your next book that you won't be able to fulfill. As such, I write this review as fair as I can, trying to assess it on its own merits, but comparisons are inevitable.

The Lost Symbol isn't a bad book, but it is a letdown. I didn't like this one for the same reason I didn't like Angels and Demons as much. Also, Brown doesn't advance the story at a good pace. A good two-thirds of the book (I'm not exaggerating, I counted the pages) was filled with variations on such a scene:

Character A: Have you heard of X?
Character B (usually Langdon): Yes, but I thought that was just a myth.
Character A shows or tells B something.
Character B reacts with shock.
Then, insert scenes of people walking from one place to another, being chased.
Then, insert the sentence "Suddenly everything made sense." At least for the next ten pages.
Repeat.

After reading this, I had to wonder whether Brown is a writer on Lost, where people can't seem to give straight answers, and where scenes never resolve any questions.

Here's my advice to Dan Brown:

1. Fire your editor. There were some whole passages, even chapters, that served no purpose other than to inflate your book to an unnecessary size. I don't mind reading big books, but I do mind reading through unnecessary words. Ch. 69, for example, is unnecessary. If your editor didn't ask you to take it out, then he should be fired. Sorry.

2. We don't need to know exactly how every character moves from one location to the next, which turn they took, what street they walked across. If it serves the plot, if the geography is important (as it was in Angels and Demons), then fine. Geography was crucial at certain moments in this book, but many times, the passages when you describe how someone moves from one part of a house to another part, what door they opened and closed, all that is boring and tedious.

3. Don't write your novel like a screenplay. Whether you've done it consciously or not, your short chapters read as if you had in mind exactly what camera shots you expect out of an inevitable movie adaptation. Leave that to the screenwriter. If they can adapt a book like "Naked Lunch," they can surely adapt your book as well. Write your novel as a novel.

4. Be careful of hubris. You're in a unique and rare position that, I'm sure, many authors dream of: your books will sell millions by default and you will get a multi-million dollar movie deal without question. Good for you! Some authors handle that well (e.g. J.K. Rowling), some don't (e.g. Stephen King, Michael Crichton). It's not that the latter are bad writers, but that they are capable of writing some really bad stuff. Having said that, I'm not saying that The Lost Symbol is bad, just that it needs to lose about 100-pages of unnecessary, repetitive scenes. Speaking of Crichton, the reason I stopped reading him is that he became too formulaic. All his books are about a bunch of mismatched experts going to some remote location and something goes wrong. Formula isn't bad per se. Rowling is formulaic too. Most of her books revolve around the Hogwarts school year, but she puts enough story in there to make it work. You should do more of that.

5. Know what you're good at. You know your technology, which makes your book authentic. You also know that your readers are likely to go Google a painting or artist you mentioned and be awed by what you described. That's great! I bet that also saves you the pain of having to request reprint permissions of artwork and such. Also, since most people don't know their history, let alone the etymology of words they use everyday, you have literally an endless supply of stories. That's what you're good at. I'd say, forget the science stuff. It's interesting, but, as with Angels and Demons, it's an awkward fit. I don't recall there being any modern science in The Da Vinci Code and I was fine with that.

6. Try a recurring character. Langdon is fine, but consider having a character or two that returns in subsequent books. Make them interesting, of course, and don't make them a love interest.

So, here's the good news. Dan Brown hasn't nuked the fridge, at least not for me. Also, now that this book is out in the open, readers are likely to give his next book a much fairer assessment. So, I look forward to reading that, but, I probably won't be buying it on the first day it's out.
576 de 642 personas piensan que la opinión es útil
2.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas A page-turner, but often for the wrong reasons. . . 23 de septiembre de 2009
Por Garvinstomp - Publicado en Amazon.com
Formato:Versión Kindle
A quick note on the ranking: I hold 5-star ratings in reserve for the best of the best. The previous Robert Langdon books I would rate at about 4 stars for being fun reads but nothing that would resemble a literary masterpiece. I enjoyed this book significantly less than the other two, hence the two stars.

'The Lost Symbol' is not a bad book. While it would certainly rank it 3rd amongst the three Robert Langdon novels it is still an amusing read. I forgive Brown for his weak writing style and I accept that he writes characters that are fairly two-dimensional with little personality outside of that which pertains explicitly to the story. I accept that this novel was going to have the exact same story structure and characters as the previous two. I accept that the relationships between people will be odd. I accept that most chapters will end with a variation on his cheap cliffhanger "And then Robert couldn't believe what he saw!" I accept all that. And yet, even with all those concessions, this one just left me flat.

When it comes to the writing style I'm not entirely sure if I should be blaming Brown or his editor (or, potentially, his lack thereof-which I guess would be blaming him). The style, while simple, could easily be smoothed out with an editor who was given some room to work. What hurts his prose is repetition of words and phrases over and over and over and over-often on the same page.

Sure, the story structure is an identical match to the first two with all the same types of characters and twists. But here's the issue, this time is just doesn't work like it did before. Here's why:

1. Robert Langdon is officially a moron: He spends more time being lectured to and making wrong guesses than he does solving anything. His inner monologue serves to deliver some interesting asides, but nothing that helps forward the plot. I'm fairly certain he figured out absolutely nothing critical in the last third of the book. He was completely marginalized.

2. The science of Noetics, as used in this book, is a complete throwaway with no bearing on the plot: In A&D the science of matter and anti-matter played a significant role in the overall plot. It's relation to the Big Bang and religion as well as its overall implementation throughout the story was essential. Here, the Noetics pops up just enough to be annoying once you realize it serves no primary purpose. Also, Noetics is barely a science. Reading this book would make one think it's far more legitimate than it is. I was fascinated several years ago when I first heard it mentioned. Upon further research one finds that it is more wishful thinking than science and that it has very little actual research and support. Closer looks at studies (the water that has been "loved" is a favorite) show gaping holes, inconsistencies, and a complete lack of scientific method. While it may sound nice it just serves no purpose.

3. The payoff just doesn't work: Maybe we're out of major historical secrets to reveal to the world because this one just fizzles out. The build-up of this story often felt like it was stretching. In the previous Robert Langdon novels he finds himself moving between a great many locations surrounded by symbols and puzzles. Here, he spends his time in a handful of buildings, several of which play no role in solving anything but are simply places for him to rest or think. I often found myself turning pages, not to see what happened next, but to see if ANYTHING happened next. The reveals in the first two were very cool. This one gets such hype and then comes the "Really? That's it. I just read 500 pages to find THAT out? There's a few hours I'll never have back." moment.

I can say, unequivocally, that when the special edition with all the pictures is released I will absolutely not be purchasing it. I just don't care to ever read this novel again. I learned a few things about history and there were some interesting parts. But overall it was just mediocre, and sometimes that's worse than being bad.
216 de 240 personas piensan que la opinión es útil
2.0 de un máximo de 5 estrellas Fast-paced, but annoyingly manipulative and too long 17 de septiembre de 2009
Por Karen Sullivan - Publicado en Amazon.com
Formato:Tapa dura|Compra verificada por Amazon
The pages turned quickly, but this was in part because I found myself skimming the vast sections of religious philosophy, psuedo scientific mumbo-jumbo and pedantic exposition, all of which seemed to go on endlessly.

The book builds and builds until the shockings truths are finally revealed. Without disclosing any details, one of these shockers had been painfully obvious for some time and I was impatient for Brown to just get it over with. When the other shocker was revealed, my reaction was "so what".

I enjoyed the cliff-hanger chapter endings in Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci Code, but they quickly became annoying in "The Lost Symbol". Worse, much of the book felt like padding. The last 50 or so pages was like an infomercial -- the story is over, but wait, there's more! I kept hoping the book would have an interesting conclusion, but it ended with a wimper, not a bang.

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