Sunday 26 May 2013

Dan Brown on Overpopulation and "Saving The World"

"This is not an activist book - but overpopulation is something that I'm concerned about”
 
...were Dan Brown's opening statements in a recent interview with the BBC.

The latest thriller from The Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown is expected to be the best-selling book of the year. But that has not stopped literary critics from gleefully tearing Inferno apart. According to the BBC, "Bilge", "noxious malarkey" and "entertaining twaddle" are just some of the choice phrases that have been picked to describe Dan Brown's Inferno in the press. Of anywhere in the world, he says his books get the worst reviews in the UK, where it "seems to be sport to kick me around a bit".



The Da Vinci Code drew protests around the world,
including being burned in India in 2006


"I wish everybody loved what I do, of course," he replies. "Of course it's hurtful. I've learned that universal acceptance and appreciation is just an unrealistic goal.

"If a reviewer is beating me up, I just say, 'Oh well, my writing is not to his or her taste.' And that's as far as it goes. Because I will simultaneously read a review where somebody says, 'Oh my God, I had so much fun reading this book and I learned so much.'

"The best thing to do is just put on the blinders, write the book that you would want to read and hope that other people share your taste. It's really that simple.

"There is a little cloak and dagger when I'm researching," he says. "Usually, half of what I'm looking at is for the book, and half is to create the illusion that I'm looking at something else.

"A lot of people assume, [because] you're writing about Dante, it's got to be about the church. Dante was very critical about the church, and I think a lot of people wanted to draw that line with me and say, 'That's where he's headed'."


That may have been a logical assumption, given that Brown's most popular and notorious work The Da Vinci Code famously raised the ire of the Catholic Church by claiming the church had been involved in an age-old cover-up over the fact Jesus had married Mary Magdalene.


"I talked to a lot of scientists who are also concerned about it and I came to understand that overpopulation is the issue to which all of our other environmental issues are tied.

"For example, things like ozone, where do we get our clean water, starvation, deforestation. These we consider problems. But they're really symptoms of overpopulation. So overpopulation to me seems like the big issue."


 In the story, Langdon and Zobrist both believe they are saving the world.


"There are moments in the novel, or at least when I was writing it, when I thought, wow, Zobrist may save the world here. Maybe this is how far we have to go to stop this."


He pauses before quickly adding a final "I don't know" to emphasise that he is not actually suggesting such an extreme solution.


"I don't have an answer," he says. "If I did, I wouldn't be writing novels, I'd be trying to help out for real."



Read the full article here :-

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22594345

1 comment:

  1. Yet another amazing book by Dan Brown! Dan Brown fans shouldn't dare to miss it! And who ain't aware of Dan Brown will become his fan after going through this book! In short go for this book for a thrilling experience!

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