I remember pre-ordering The Lost Symbol on the day it was
announced. I had a reason to be so excited over the new release,
since I thoroughly enjoyed two previous books about the infallible
Harvard professor. Neither took me too long to read, but I cannot
say the same about this one.
There are a lot of things wrong with this novel. Many other
reviewers mentioned that if felt very formulaic, and I have to
agree. If you've read both Angels & Demons and The Da Vinci
Code, then none of the plot's twists and turns would surprise you.
The big revelation about the villain's identity was very
predictable, for example. The villain's secret source? Piece of
cake. I didn't experience the same surprise and shock as I did
while reading the prior installments. The characters seemed very
familiar. An elderly genius attacked by the bad guy in the
beginning? Check. The genius' female relative who becomes an
"intelligent love interest" of Robert? Check. A psychopathic
villain who likes to walk around naked and praising himself? Double
check. This time Robert Langdon asks more questions than he finds
answers. Most riddle solving is done by other characters, which
rather negates the importance of Langdon as a lead character. It
felt like others around him kept saying: "Don't you get it, Robert?
It's right in front of you!". I dared to find explanation to what
Dan Brown tried to achieve here. The book's main theme is of course
the humanity wondering in the intellectual dark, waiting for the
enlightenment that would change the world forever. Could it be that
Brown tried to parallel Langdon's experiences to the theme, as the
latter remained skeptical throughout the book only to open his eyes
in the end? Either way, the attempt did not register as strong in
my book (pan unintended). Langdon's stubbornness and disbelief
annoyed me quite a bit, and I did not feel like the character grew
through his experiences.
Katherine Solomon, the present strong female heroine, was obviously
wearing the pants in this adventure, since most of the puzzle
solving was done by her. She was annoyingly passionate about her
super-duper secret research, and she felt like it was necessary to
share her super-duper secret discoveries with everybody. Peter
Solomon, the great keeper of the pyramid and the strong female
heroine's brother, contradicted himself numerous times preaching
complete secrecy about the Lost Word, yet revealing it's true
nature and location to non-Mason Langdon, when even most of
brotherhood had no idea about it. And don't get me started on the
villain. His weak reasons for pursuing the treasure and endless
rants were unconvincing and plain tiring. I mean come on, a TV
show?
Overall, Lost Symbol is very repetitive and could do without at
least 200 pages. The characters have random theological and
scientific conversations that last for pages, while on the run from
CIA and a maniac. Significant blood and limb loss apparently
doesn't slow them down. Phrases like "My God! and "It cannot be!"
are overused. I understand that what you're doing there is
groundbreaking, but please stop fainting of excitement every time
you discover yet another inscription on the box. And yes, the
villain sucks. I just had to point that out again.