Paperback 2009, 434 pages.
Hong Kong.
Kyle McAvoy was about to graduate from Yale Law School when he was blackmailed with a videotape taken while he was in college. He was asked to join a large NYC law firm and to spy on behalf of opposing counsel in a case involving huge defense contractors. He eventually asked for help from his father (also a lawyer), a defense attorney who called in the federal authorities, and planned to turn the tables on the blackmailers. However, the blackmailers mysteriously disappeared when Kyle was about to hand over the illegally downloaded files as part of the sting.
This is a book unsatisfying on many levels. First, you keep reading, thinking something exciting will happen, and then you find yourself close to the end of the book and it dawns on you that there is not much more to the plot. Second, it is never made clear why Kyle is so afraid of the tape (which actually proves his innocence) but so brave as to try to turn the tables on people who are willing to kill. Third, the book leaves the reader hanging as to who the "bad guys" are. Fourth, the ending, as with many other Grisham novels, is quite anticlimactic, bordering on limp.
The reader does get to see how new lawyers get their starts in these large law firms. Of course I do not know if what the author writes reflects at all what happens at the start of these people's careers.
"Uninspired" is how I would categorize this book. Better than many Patterson books, but at some level more dissatisfying as the expectations were high.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Thursday, July 15, 2010
The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown
Hardcover 2009. 509 pages.
South Amboy, NJ
Zach Solomon, son of Peter, has gone over to the dark side because he feels he is abandoned by his father and wants to get even. He infiltrates the Freemasons and attains the highest level (33rd). By kidnapping Peter, he gets Peter's sister Katherine and Professor Robert Langdon to help him locate the lost symbol which will make him ready for the final sacrifice. The books starts with Langdon getting a fake message early in the morning and ends with Langdon and Katherine seeing the morning sun bounce from the National Monument to the Capitol Building the next morning. Meanwhile the CIA, the Capitol Architect, the leader of the National Cathedral, and many others are involved, with a few people dying along the way.
The book does contain some plot twists, most of which are in the "so what" category. The only one that impresses is the discovery that Mal'akh is Zach, who we thought died in a foreign prison. There are also many occasions where one screams at the stupidity of Langdon and Katherine, such as why Langdon would hop on a plane to go to Washington DC to begin with, or why they would believe Peter is freed without actually talking to him.
In terms of Freemason secrets such as their ceremonies, I don't find them that exciting. That there are these "perfect squares" is an interesting fact. Finally, it is a bit of a let down that the lost symbol is actually a Bible inside the corner stone of the National Monument (which of course never gets uncovered). The last 20 or so pages see the author trying to pontificate on how we are all creators and other philosophical issues; he is not qualified to do that. If I wanted to read up on the meaning of life, a book by Dan Brown probably isn't high on my reading list.
Overall not a bad book. The ending is more satisfying than the one in "The Da Vinci Code." It is not good enough to warrant the 500 plus pages, though.
South Amboy, NJ
Zach Solomon, son of Peter, has gone over to the dark side because he feels he is abandoned by his father and wants to get even. He infiltrates the Freemasons and attains the highest level (33rd). By kidnapping Peter, he gets Peter's sister Katherine and Professor Robert Langdon to help him locate the lost symbol which will make him ready for the final sacrifice. The books starts with Langdon getting a fake message early in the morning and ends with Langdon and Katherine seeing the morning sun bounce from the National Monument to the Capitol Building the next morning. Meanwhile the CIA, the Capitol Architect, the leader of the National Cathedral, and many others are involved, with a few people dying along the way.
The book does contain some plot twists, most of which are in the "so what" category. The only one that impresses is the discovery that Mal'akh is Zach, who we thought died in a foreign prison. There are also many occasions where one screams at the stupidity of Langdon and Katherine, such as why Langdon would hop on a plane to go to Washington DC to begin with, or why they would believe Peter is freed without actually talking to him.
In terms of Freemason secrets such as their ceremonies, I don't find them that exciting. That there are these "perfect squares" is an interesting fact. Finally, it is a bit of a let down that the lost symbol is actually a Bible inside the corner stone of the National Monument (which of course never gets uncovered). The last 20 or so pages see the author trying to pontificate on how we are all creators and other philosophical issues; he is not qualified to do that. If I wanted to read up on the meaning of life, a book by Dan Brown probably isn't high on my reading list.
Overall not a bad book. The ending is more satisfying than the one in "The Da Vinci Code." It is not good enough to warrant the 500 plus pages, though.
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