Read The Dan Brown Enigma Online
Authors: Graham A Thomas
According to some sources Brown keeps an antique hourglass on his desk so each time the sands run out, he stops to briefly do some exercises, such as sit-ups, push-ups and stretching to keep the circulation flowing.
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Another Brown legend says that he practises inversion therapy and hangs upside down in anti-gravity boots when he runs into difficulty with writing and can’t find a solution to a problem. ‘Not only does it increase the circulation to the head but you think differently upside down,’ he said. ‘I have this habit of painting Robert Langdon into a corner and saying, “You know what? I know I’ll find a way out of this” and if you don’t, you hang upside down and think about it from a different perspective and sometimes it works.’
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This practice is not for the faint of heart, or those people who have high blood pressure or heart disease. The idea is that hanging by the feet not only sends blood rushing to the head but each joint in the body is loaded in an opposite way to standing in the identical position. Proponents of inversion therapy say hanging upside down is good for the spine because it relieves pressure on the discs and the nerves, enabling the spine to return to its original shape.
There is no indication that Brown has back problems, so his use of anti-gravity boots is to see things from a different point of view. His writing cottage has no phone, email or internet but it does have his anti-gravity boots. ‘It’s a different perspective. You’re hanging upside down you’re seeing the world from a different point of view and you think differently,’ he said.
Now we know how Brown writes, let’s take a closer look at his literary formula. We have seen that the Sidney Sheldon book was Brown’s eureka moment and inspired him to write thrillers, but he has also been influenced by Robert Ludlum’s Jason Bourne series. ‘Ludlum’s early books are complex, smart, and yet still move at a lightning pace,’ he pointed out. ‘This series got me interested in the genre of big-concept, international thrillers.’
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He has recurring themes that he brings into each of his novels – the hero pulled out of his or her familiar environment and plunged into a dangerous, unforgiving new setting where a life-and-death struggle needs to be resolved within a very short space of time.
Brown writes stories where good and evil battle it out. ‘In all the ancient myths there are monsters that haunt your hero,’ he said. ‘I am always fascinated by the mythological resonance of these villains and they are by far the most interesting and pathetic. They are almost monsters but they are almost superhuman too and they are going up against somebody and your hero on some level is a little bit more than ordinary.’
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In three of his books the protagonist is symbologist Dr Robert Langdon, an academic and the kind of man the Brown would like to be. Largely because Langdon is prepared to take risks in order to solve his puzzle, Brown puts his character into danger so he can find the solution. ‘He’s very curious,’ Brown said. ‘Intellectually curious and that’s what I hope these books will do for readers is make them intellectually curious. He’s not an action hero and yet he finds himself in these situations where he finds himself uncovering ancient historical truths and having to decipher codes and puzzles to solve mysteries.’
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He has also said that he loves building tension in his novels. Having a female lead in his novels, either as a companion to Langdon or as the heroine of the story, gives the novel romantic and sexual tension, which in most cases is implied. This adds an extra dimension while also building the tension. Brown finds smart women very attractive so he has given Langdon that same trait.
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Brown also says his character must have some form of Achilles heel, some weakness otherwise he is simply a cardboard cutout. ‘The classic weakness is hubris and Langdon doesn’t have that. I would say that his fault is that he is curious to a fault. He puts himself in dangerous situations to find things out and that is something I would not do.’
Brown is fascinated by veiled or hidden power – those organisations that operate in the shadows. ‘The idea that everything happens for reasons we’re not quite seeing. It reminds me of religion a little. The power that religion has is that you think nothing is random. If there’s a tragedy in my life, that’s God testing me or sending me a message. That’s what conspiracy theorists do. They say, “The economy’s terrible? Oh, that’s not random. That’s a bunch of rich guys in Prague who sat down and…”’
Yet Brown still remains a sceptic. He is not a conspiracy theorist and doesn’t believe in UFOs. ‘I think one reason my books have found mainstream success is that they’re written from a sceptical point of view,’ Brown said. Langdon is a sceptic as well, which connects the reader with someone who will not take anything at face value but whose first reaction is disbelief. ‘If I’m doing my job,’ says Brown, ‘then what happens is that you, the sceptical reader, move through my stories and start to say, “Oh my God. Maybe. Maybe.”’
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The astonishing success of
The Da Vinci Code
not only propelled him into the spotlight but also brought detractors out of the woodwork. ‘I am aware there are those out there who disagree with me,’ Brown has said, ‘who say awful things about me, who make little pictures and I know that a lot of them have published long lists of my shortcomings, my errors and my mistakes.’
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Because of that success people came out of the shadows to hang on Brown’s coat-tails in any way they could. ‘There is something that comes along with success that you have people who are gunning for you, who want to say, “That’s not worthy. Why is everybody enjoying that?” and it comes with the territory.’
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Critics claim that his writing is awkward and that he is no literary genius. Brown’s response is that he never set out to be a great literary author. The point is for the reader to have fun. ‘There are some people who understand what I do and get on the train and go for a ride and have a great time, and there are other people who should read something else.’
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How Brown measures his success is how well he connects with his readers. His official website regularly gets hundreds of emails and most of those are complimentary. ‘The nicest thing I ever hear and I often hear it and it makes me happy is that somebody will say, “After I got out of high school I really didn’t read much but somebody made me read
The Da Vinci Code
– they hit me over the head with it and finally I read it and now I can’t stop reading. You reintroduced me to the love of books” and for me that’s the most gratifying and rewarding thing about it.’
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Both Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci Code are dedicated to Blythe, whom Brown has given a great deal of credit, stressing her invaluable help as a co-researcher.
D
AVID
A.
S
HUGARTS
T
he old saying that âbehind every successful man is a successful woman' is certainly true of Dan Brown. When Brown gave his evidence in the High Court at the Old Bailey in a detailed witness statement responding to two historians claiming that he plagiarised their ideas in
The Da Vinci Code
(which we will look at in detail later), he gave his fans a unique insight into the story behind the most successful thriller ever written.
Blythe has been the driving force in Brown's life ever since they met in Los Angeles, and together they make an impressive team. It was her networking that got him into the studio with top musicians and a top producer for his first CD. She sent out the press releases proclaiming Brown as the next big singer-songwriter. It was her contacting agents and publishing companies that got Brown the publishing deal for
187 Men to Avoid
.
He cites her as his inspiration but there is more to her than that. As an art history enthusiast and Leonardo da Vinci fan, she contributed some of the more interesting art ideas to the novel. As Joanna Walters and Alice O'Keeffe noted in
The Observer
in March 2006, âThe older, more glamorous half of the Browns is emerging as, if not the “real brains” behind
The Da Vinci Code
, then certainly a creative energy as indispensable to her husband as the Mona Lisa herself.'
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Blythe has had an influence on every Dan Brown novel with the exception of
Deception Point
.
Angels & Demons
is dedicated to Blythe, and Brown writes in his dedication for
The Da Vinci Code
âFor Blythe⦠again. More than ever.' Indeed, Brown says she is more than an inspiration, she is âthe intellectual catalyst, sounding board and initial judge.'
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Little is known about Blythe. He has described her in various interviews as an art historian, or as a history buff and a Da Vinci fanatic. Painting is her hobby, yet there is no indication that she ever graduated in art history.
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Blythe hails from Palmdale in California. As we have seen, she and Brown met in 1991 when she was Director of Artistic Development at the National Academy for Songwriters in L.A. By the time she headed east with Brown on the promise of a publishing deal for
187 Men To Avoid
they were lovers, and she must have been very committed to the relationship to leave her home and her job to pull up sticks and move to the other side of the country with him.
But without a doubt she is crucial to Brown's success. On the second CD,
Angels & Demons
, Brown thanked her for âbeing my tireless co-writer, co-producer, second engineer, significant other and therapist'. Once in quiet Exeter, Blythe provided essential research material while Brown concentrated on his writing. In 1997 the couple tied the knot and for several years lived in an old mill, until they hit the big time with
The Da Vinci Code
and moved to a discreet house tucked up a private drive near Rye on the New Hampshire coast.
According to Rogak, Blythe's input into Brown's first novel
Digital Fortress
was largely in an editing capacity. âWith the help of Blythe's keen editing eye, the material that made it to the final draft was only the tip of the iceberg. But what went unsaid made the characters deeper and the story line richer in the end.'
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While Blythe didn't get involved in the research on
Digital Fortress,
she did on the subsequent novels apart from
Deception Point,
when she swapped her research role for her editor's hat. âUnfortunately for Blythe, the technological subject matter of
Deception Point
did not interest her much,' Brown said. âShe helped research some of the geology and glaciology, the architecture of the White House, Air Force One, etc., but she served more as a first class editor and sounding board.'
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With Brown's fascination for symbols, codes, Renaissance art and Blythe's love of all things Da Vinci, Brown had a winning combination. In Rogak's opinion: âWith her vibrant imagination and burgeoning knowledge in that direction, he hit the literary jackpot.'
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While Brown was researching
Angels & Demons
, Blythe became the author of another humour publication called
The Bald Book
which, Lisa Rogak said, âcould rightfully be considered to be a love letter to bald men everywhere.' Blythe approached Wieser and Wieser again and the agency sold it to Pinnacle Books. The book came out on 1 June 1998, four months after
Digital Fortress
. The author biography said, âArtist Blythe Brown lives in New England and spends her days painting while her husband happily goes bald.' But although the book is attributed to Blythe, the copyright is held by Dan Brown.
In February 1998 when
Digital Fortress
was released, Blythe took on publicising the novel in addition to the work the publishers did, which wasn't much. She sent out press releases she'd written, she got on the phone to talk-show producers to book Brown and she contacted newspapers to set up interviews with her husband.
According to Rogak it is much harder to promote a book of fiction than it is a book of non-fiction where âa publicist can market the title as a solution to a problem.' So, as an angle, Blythe set up a website that featured Brown as a source âto advise readers and viewers on how to protect themselves online'. The material she developed to promote the book focused on the more paranoid aspects of who was reading people's email and who was watching people online. These two aspects made Brown a popular interview subject. Sometimes she had him doing up to four radio interviews a day. She also arranged for him to sign copies of his book in as many bookstores in New Hampshire as she could. Blythe also contacted the
Union Leader
, New Hampshire's largest daily newspaper, and got a reporter to attend a talk Brown was giving to the New Hampshire chapter of the American Society for Industrial Security. Despite all their efforts, the sales for
Digital Fortress
were poor, yet âhe basked in the attention the media had been giving him for
Digital Fortress
.'
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Later in 1998 Brown began work on his second novel,
Angels & Demons
. âOf course, at this point I was an unknown, unpublished author,' he said. âMoney was tight, but we had enough to travel, something Blythe and I both love, and we decided to visit Rome.'
Unlike the first novel, Blythe would play a major part in this new project. âAlthough I had researched
Digital Fortress
entirely on my own, for this new book Blythe became my research assistant,' said Brown. âThis was wonderful. We were able to work together as husband and wife; I now had a sounding board and a travel partner on research trips. Although Blythe's main interest and expertise was art, I did ask her for help researching specifics on scientific topics like Galileo, the Big Bang, particle accelerators, etc. She also served as a first-class set of eyes for new sections I was writing.'
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