"Greg Taylor is the up-and-coming author in this field, and what he has to say makes fascinating reading." -- Bestselling author Graham Hancock.
In 2004, Greg Taylor decoded clues left on the cover of The Da Vinci Code to reveal the topics of the sequel to Dan Brown's bestseller. Five years before publication of The Lost Symbol, he wrote a book (Da Vinci in America, subsequently republished as The Guide to Dan Brown's The Solomon Key), correctly predicting that Freemasonry, Washington, D.C., the House of the Temple, Kryptos and many other locations and historical elements would play a part in the new book.
Now, in his revised and updated The Guide to Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol, Taylor gives the ultimate guide to Dan Brown's latest bestseller. From Noetic Science to the influence of Freemasonry and Deism on the Founding Fathers, the Guide fills in all the details so that you have a better understanding of many strange and secret topics that are covered in The Lost Symbol.
Greg Taylor is the perfect tour guide to The Lost Symbol.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
cornucopia of info related to Brown's The lost symbol,
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This review is from: The Guide to Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol: Freemasonry, Noetic Science, and the Hidden History of America (Paperback)
This book is a relatively brief collection of chapters about various themes and subjects touched upon in Dan Brown's latest book. It explicitly _does not_ claim to be a 'gotcha fact-checker' type book. And it is not one. There is no criticism of Brown's book here except a few gentle nudges that he might have included this or that interesting bit which Brown chose to leave out. What this book is, is a series of interesting light essay chapters about various subjects related to The Lost Symbol, none of them very deep but all of them interesting and entertaining to read. I enjoyed the book for what it is, rather than bemoan it for not being something it never claims to be. It also has a good selection of books and websites to access for further information and photos of various buildings referenced in the novel. Frankly, I found this book more interesting and entertaining than Brown's novel, which I found disappointing in the extreme; boring, badly edited and annoying. This book is none of those things. :-)If you'd like some light reading on the freemasons, noetic science, the Founding Fathers, DC arcana etc ,then buy this and enjoy.
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