After the great success with the best-selling novels “The Da Vinci Code” and “Angels and Demons” Dan Brown’s new novel, “The Lost Symbol” demonstrated once again the interest of the readers in mysteries and secret organizations that rule over the world. This new thriller about Freemasons was sold in more than a million copies in US, Canadian and British bookshops in just one day. This number also includes those copies sold before the official sale, through Amazon.com where it has been in the top list for months.
Posts Tagged ‘book’Million copies of Dan Brown’s “The Lost Symbol” sold in one dayThursday, September 17th, 2009Harry Potter in theaters 2 days earlyWednesday, April 22nd, 2009
Review: Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsSaturday, October 25th, 2008
Review: The last Cato – Matilde AsensiWednesday, October 22nd, 2008This is one of the very few books that I’ve read more than once in the last years, and there is a very good reason for that. It’s a book packed with adventures and seasoned with lots of facts and figures from the past, along with some myth and mysteries, that really involves you. If you like the ecclesiastical thrillers (such as the Da Vinci Code, or the Bible Code), this book will most certainly get to you. Matilde Asensi seems to be a very informed writer, since everything in the book seems true, from the dirty laundry of the Vatican, through the tensions in Israel, Egypt or Turkey, to the Sicilian mafia, with all the ranks, place names and info that actually exist. Sometimes, foreign languages are used and translated throughout the book. These are the ancient Greek, Byzantine and Latin, the modern Greek, Italian, Arab… (more…) |
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Not the best book in the Harry Potter series, partially because it lacks of it’s own story, until you get nearly to the end, and partially because it gets bloodier than ever. What started as a book for children has evolved to something that even some older reader can’t swallow. Even so, the book is great, and it had my full attention like all other Harry Potters. Joan K. Rowling really knows how to create expectation and develop the story so it’s interesting from the first page to the last one.


