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28 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
Written by Christians, for Christians., 4 Aug 2004
I bought this book because I was interested in finding out more about the topics and ideas raised in Dan Brown's book "The Da Vinci Code" and expected "Cracking Da Vinci's Code" to provide just that. I was very disappointed. This is a book expounding the righteousness of Christianity and the "dangers" of questioning institutional religion.The foreword states "the intention of this book is not to unravel Da Vinci's code" - it is a great pity the title isn't so honest. Indeed, items one would expect to be discussed in various chapters are declared within those chapters as being outside the scope of the book. The front cover states "you've read the fiction, now read the facts"; the back cover states that the book is "helping you separate fact from fiction", yet in chapter one we are told "we are going to reveal to you not only *what* the [Holy] Grail is, but *where it is today*". Balderdash. As you would no doubt expect from such a publication it is declared as the usual intangible thing; "a multi-ethnic, global, spiritual fellowship made up of all kinds of forgiven sinners. The real church...is the spiritual Holy Grail". Absolutely no originality there, and absolutely no "fact". The book is written almost as a Sunday school educational text, complete with a sub-story that is both patronizing and extreme (touching on drugs, cults, etc - the sort of thing that the authors evidently expect any reader of Brown's book would no doubt get involved with). The story features a character going through religious doubts after reading Brown's Da Vinci Code, and is patently designed to elicit empathy from the confused Christian reader, panicking them into feeling "alone" and "left out" of the "Divine Arc" (this of course being touted as the real "truth"). The authors seem to want to emphasize that Brown claims his book is "fact". Brown states at the start of his book what the facts are and this does not include the *fictional* story, as anyone with a jot of rationality would realize. There are copious amounts of Biblical references, most of which provide no useful observations on Brown's work. The cynic would say that the authors simply cannot provide a balanced assessment of the Da Vinci Code content since they have a vested interest in bolstering the organizations and institutions they view as being eroded by it (as an aside one author claims in the book to have been "a close boyhood friend of John Lennon" - what relevance this has is anyone's guess, particularly when Lennon himself once declared the Beatles to be more popular than Jesus and that Christianity might disappear before rock'n'roll). Any reader seeking facts and impartiality would be better off with "Cracking the Da Vinci Code: The Facts Behind the Fiction" by Simon Cox. Summary : Anyone simply looking for facts without religious spin should steer clear, but troubled Christians might get something out of it. Rating this review : I w |