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The Da Vinci Cod: A Fishy Parody
 
 
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The Da Vinci Cod: A Fishy Parody [Paperback]

Don Brine

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Product details

  • Paperback: 180 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers; paperback / softback edition (Oct 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0060848073
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060848071
  • Product Dimensions: 18.2 x 12.8 x 1.4 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,131,525 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Don Brine
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Product Description

1st trade edition paperback, fine As new

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Jacques Sauna-Lurker lay dead in the main hallway of the National Art Gallery of Fine Paintings, in the heart of London, a British city, the capital of Britain, with a population density of approximately 10,500 people per square mile and a total population of approximately seven million people, unless by 'London' you include the Greater London Area, which has a population of about twenty million people and a slightly lower population density per square mile. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

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Amazon.com:  5 reviews
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Complete waste of time 8 Feb 2006
By Don Brene - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
If ever there was a book that wes ripe for parody it's The Da Vinci Code. Unfortunately this book, The Da Vinci Cod, is a very poorly written, very poorly ploted sad substitute. Don't waste your time nor money on it. It is I'm afraid a greatly disappointing failure.

I get the feeling that this failure is due in degree to--this may sound odd in talking about a parody, but it is an impression I have--taking the book The Da Vinci Code too seriously. Great parodies are achieved by pointing out the absurdities of their subject matter. This book, the Da Vinci Cod, seems to miss that altogether
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
I liked it! 8 April 2009
By Arthur Enyedy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Humor is difficult - what one person thinks is funny, another person will think is stupid. I am the type of person who finds the jokes in The Da Vinci Cod to be funny. I laughed out loud at some of the nonsense written here, and any book that is funny enough to make me laugh like this one did deserves a good review.

Here is an example that made me laugh:
"There was a pregnant pause. Not, perhaps I should clarify, a pause that lasted nine months. That would be more than a pause, quite frankly. It would be more like a hiatus. Rather a pause that contained within it the possibility of something that would only later come to light. A pause that might make you sick in the mornings."

This is one of the typical jokes - the author goes off on a looney tangent in the middle of what should be a tense scene, but the digression by the author spoils the tension. Of course, he is making fun of Dan Brown's writing style, the Da Vinci code contained plenty of paragraphs of nonsense like this.

Here is another joke:
"He had a large black mole on his cheek of exactly the same color as his large black cassock."

The other jokes are outrageous plot coincidences and ridiculous statements by the characters. For example, the murder in the art museum is committed by shoving a cod (yes, a big fish) down the throat of the professor. Naturally, our hero is implicated in this crime because every single fish scale contains a copy of his fingerprint! The hero (Robert Donglan) is the best Annagramist in all of London. The police call him to the scene of crime to puzzle out a mysterious anagram, which the dying professor managed to write in his own blood - "The Chatholic Curch Had Me Murdered!" Will Mr Donglan be able to discern the meaning behind this obscure message?

One good thing about this parody is that while it makes fun of the plot and characters of The Da Vinci Code, but it doesn't do a tedious chapter by chapter rewrite. The Da Vinci Cod lampoons the longwinded book by Dan Brown by being a concise story. It also makes subtle fun of the Da Vinci Code by offering a ridiculous explanation of the Mona Lisa that is nonetheless at least as plausible the stuff Dan Brown dreamed up.

This book is only 180 pages, you can read it one enjoyable afternoon.

If you really loved The Da Vinci Code, then maybe you would not enjoy seeing a treasured tale mocked. But I was disappointed in the Da Vinci Code. Perhaps no book could have lived up to the hype, but I thought Brown's book had a terrible plot. Some of the puzzles and research he wrote about was interesting, but the story he crafted around those research gems was lame. I thought the movie was disappointing too.

Other books I think are funny: Confederacy of Dunces, Fletch (the first three in that series), The Bear Went Over the Mountain, Freddy and Fredricka, some of the zany books about Discworld. I also think Mad Magazine humor is pretty good.

[...]
6 of 10 people found the following review helpful
The Bible For A New Age! 31 Oct 2005
By Damian J. Spooner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
An entertaining explanation of the existence of everything. This makes more sense than the traditional bible which also contains fiction mixed with fact; so it's just as important. Don't forget that fiction has, in fact, become fact on many occasions throughout history, first conjured by the mind and then made into reality! I'm sure we'll hear from the naysayers with their talk of halibut or perch, but Don Brine (aka Adam Roberts) has definitely done his schoolwork and spawned a masterpiece. If you like Monty Python type humor, then you'll probably enjoy this book.

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