The Greatest Literary Works

literary works documentation. essay on literature. student paper. etc

Visit our official blog Great Literary Works dot com

The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code sequel

Written by son of rambow on Monday, September 14, 2009

Dan Brown has admitted that the success of The Da Vinci Code left him "temporarily crippled" when it came to writing his new conspiracy thriller, The Lost Symbol, which is published at midnight tonight.

In a rare interview, the reclusive author said that he was already writing The Lost Symbol when he started to realise that The Da Vinci Code "would be big". "The thing that happened to me and must happen to any writer who's had success is that I temporarily became very self-aware," he told Parade. "Instead of writing and saying, 'This is what the character does,' you say, 'Wait, millions of people are going to read this.' It's sort of like a tennis player who thinks too hard about a stroke – you're temporarily crippled."

But Brown overcame the paralysis – "I realised that none of it had any relevance to what I was doing. I'm just a guy who tells a story" – taking five years to pen the new adventures of his dapper symbologist hero Robert Langdon. His publisher, Random House, has lined up a 6.5m print run, one million of which are due to land in the UK. Waterstone's is predicting it will become the fastest-selling fiction hardback of the decade, other than Harry Potter – it has been the top seller at Amazon.co.uk for weeks – and bookshops are planning early openings tomorrow morning to catch readers on their way to work.

Early sightings of the closely-guarded text indicate that Brown has kept to the formula that made The Da Vinci Code the UK's bestselling adult paperback novel of all time, with 4.5m copies of the title sold since its publication in 2003. Readers of the Mail on Sunday were treated to a pull-out supplement containing The Lost Symbol's first two chapters, opening with an initiation into a masonic lodge "just blocks away from the White House", and with the arrival of Professor Robert Langdon in Washington DC, still sporting the "charcoal turtleneck, Harris Tweed jacket, khakis, and collegiate cordovan loafers" that give him more than a passing resemblance to his creator.

"There are parallels between it and all my other books. I'm back in the same world of symbols, secret societies, art, and history," Brown told Parade. Early reviews have borne the author's description out, with the LA Times judging that The Lost Symbol will "feel very familiar to readers of the previous Langdon books". Meanwhile the New York Times greeted the title with a largely positive early review, judging that Brown is "bringing sexy back to a genre that had been left for dead" and that the novel was "impossible to put down". Criticism from the New York Times centred on an over-use of italics, of which it said "the author uses so many italics that even brilliant experts wind up sounding like teenage girls". "And Mr Brown would face an interesting creative challenge if the phrases 'What the hell ...?,' 'Who the hell ... ?' and 'Why the hell ... ?' were made unavailable to him," the review continued. "The surprises here are so fast and furious that those phrases get quite the workout."

But overall, it said, Brown's "excitable, hyperbolic tone is one of the guilty pleasures of his books. ('Actually, Katherine, it's not gibberish.' His eyes brightened again with the thrill of discovery. 'It's ... Latin.'')"

Only four people at the book's UK publisher Transworld have read The Lost Symbol, with passwords and encryptions used on internal and external communications to keep its contents secret. Jon Howells at Waterstone's is set to become the first person in the UK outside Transworld to read the novel, taking delivery of a copy at 7.30 this evening and aiming to finish it by tomorrow morning, while Borders has lined up a speed reading champion, Anne Jones, to tackle it tomorrow morning.

"The Lost Symbol is expected to be the biggest hardback fiction release of the year, likely even this decade," said Borders senior fiction buyer Ruth Atkins. "We've had a record-breaking number of customer pre-orders and we're expecting to welcome lots of less frequent book-buyers into our stores. We'll also be opening our stores an hour earlier to cater for those people on their way to work who can't wait until lunchtime to get their hands on the next Dan Brown blockbuster."

But not everyone is as excited about its publication. Less-than-enamoured readers on Twitter have begun responding to mentions of Dan Brown by asking "Dan who?" and have even created a #danwho hashtag which they are hoping to get into the site's trending topics, while at US publishing website GalleyCat, suggestions to name "Dan Brown Day" have included "Brown-Out", "The Day Fiction Died" and the "Beigeocalypse". Booksellers reeling under the pressure of falling sales will be hoping that his many fans disagree.[source: www.guardian.co.uk

Read More......

Free credit scores guide

Written by son of rambow on Monday, September 14, 2009

Credit scores affect whether you can get credit and what you pay for credit cards, auto loans, mortgages and other kinds of credit. For most kinds of credit scores, higher scores mean you are more likely to be approved and pay a lower interest rate on new credit.

Want to rent an apartment? Without good scores, your apartment application may be turned down by the landlord. Your credit scores also may determine how big a deposit you will have to pay for telephone, electricity or natural gas service.

Lenders look at your credit score all the time. They look at your scores when deciding, for example, whether to change your interest rate or credit limit on a credit card, or whether to send you an offer through the mail. Having good credit scores makes your financial dealings a lot easier and can save you money in lower interest rates. That's why they are a vital part of your financial health.

There are different means of calculating the credit scores. One of the most widely used credit scores are the FICO scores. When lenders talk about "your score," they usually mean the FICO® score developed by Fair Isaac Corporation. It is today's most commonly used scoring system.

The credit scores are the basis for most of the financial investments and tools available to debtors today. Without a good credit score the chances of getting beneficial loans like home loans, educational loans, etc are minimized. It also reduces the chances of getting employment, as most employers do check the credit rating before hiring. Also poor credit scores keep on adding to harassment and constant nagging from lenders to pay back their debts.

Read More......

From Holmes to Harry Potter; British popular fiction.

Written by son of rambow on Saturday, September 12, 2009

BESTSELLERS are in the air at the moment. A recent BBC television series "Reading the Decades" took a ten-yearly census of the books that had got people reading, talking and, most importantly, buying, during the post-war period. Now Clive Bloom extends that enquiry back to the beginning of the 20th century, by when Britain could be said to have become unequivocally literate (at the outbreak of the first world war only 1% of the population was still unable to read).

The reasons behind this sudden need to investigate what kinds of books people want to buy (or borrow, for Mr Bloom pays special attention to the role of local libraries in keeping sales of authors such as Catherine Cookson and Frederick Forsyth in their millions) are not hard to guess. The recent...

Read More......

Popular USA Casino

Written by son of rambow on Saturday, September 12, 2009

Golden Casino is one of the most popular usa online casino today. They offers new players a free bonus of $555, the largest online casino currently accepting USA players has proven to be top notch offering big player comps and awesome customer service. They have over 100 online casino games for gamblers to pick from. Golden Casino has the great odds with a payout percentage of 98.5%.

The biggest casino bonuses given by Rushmore Casino which offer players a bonus of $888. All you need is, just download software and register. They utilize Real Time Gaming software, voted favorite casino software 2006, Plus every month you will be entitled to the special bonus and chances to win luxury vacation packages. They have over 100 online casino games for players to choose from. Rushmore Casino has the best odds with a payout percentage of 98.7%.

The other popular USA Casino is Super Slot Casino offer new players a bonus up to $500. Part of the Casino Coins Network. Every day Super Slots awards one lucky winner their welcome bonus. Monday Mania: Monday is the day to play, You could win up to $1,000 in extra player prizes when you play any of your favorite games. Read the usa casino review at www.bestusaonlinecasinos.org.

Read more information about top 10 casinos at TopUsaOnlineCasinos.com. TopUsaOnlineCasinos.com is a FREE guide to help US Players find safe and fun online gambling destinations. Casinos ranked by pro poker and blackjack players, according to bonus size, payout rate, customer support, # of games, deposit options, graphics and ease of use.

BestUSAOnlineCasinos.org is a FREE online casino review guide assisting US Players find safe, reliable and trustworthy gambling websites.

Read More......

Cheap Web Hosting Guide

Written by son of rambow on Friday, September 11, 2009

Many web hosting company now are competing to give the best service for their customer by offering the lower price with more features services. But, cheap hosting is not only the prime factor when you are looking for reliable web hosting.

The best way to choose a web hosting, first of all you need to know what your needs. Make a listing of your questions and needs for your website. Every website has particular needs, such as large amounts of space for photos, large amounts of bandwidth for a particular program, or the capabilities of holding a huge database. These are the types of questions you need to ask yourself, about what your needs are, and then research all the hosting providers that fit your budget to find the best hosting provider for your website.

Web Hosting Choice is a free web hosting reviews guide to help users choose the right web host for their personal or business website. Their focus is on providing a simple, easy to follow site to help users choose the best web hosting plan most suitable for a small site or for a large e-commerce website.

With only $4/month you can host unlimitted domain and space. This is good for you who are looking for shared hosting with the most economic budget. You can compare the support and facilities beetwen justhost, bluehost, hostmonster and money more that listed on webhostingchoice.com.

The web hosting sites, which were rated highest in the industry, are listed below and are rated based on affordability, reliability, uptime and tech support. Read the review of Best 10 Web Hosting Sites only at webhostingchoice.com.

Read More......

Life of Pi by Yann Martel

Written by son of rambow on Sunday, September 06, 2009

In his American debut, the prize-winning Canadian fiction writer Yann Martel begins with an explanation of how this particular tale first transfixed him. It was a story, he recalls, to "make you believe in God."

That's ambitious, even for an accomplished fabulist and metaphysical philosopher, but it's also a very clever way to start people turning pages. Right out of the gate, "Life of Pi" is full of fierce but friendly storytelling energy. It's a real adventure: brutal, tender, expressive, dramatic and disarmingly funny.

Piscine Molitor Patel, named for a Parisian swimming pool, is the son of a zookeeper in Pondicherry, "once the capital of that most modest of colonial empires, French India." Such exoticism serves him well; Pi's early surroundings, as he and Martel describe them, are wondrous. "I spent more hours than I can count a quiet witness to the highly mannered, manifold expressions of life that grace our planet," he says. "It is something so bright, loud, weird and delicate as to stupefy the senses."

That's exquisite, but only if the author can provide examples. Happily, Pi's analysis is repeatedly borne out by Martel's astonishing abilities as an informed and impassioned describer.

Pi spends his precocious adolescence studying readily available zoology, and, to the eventual dismay of his parents, three unique religions. "They didn't know that I was a practicing Hindu, Christian and Muslim. Teenagers always hide a few things from their parents, isn't that so? All sixteen-year- olds have secrets, don't they?" His spiritual affairs are rendered with loving care, and the inevitable farcical debate among Pi's religious educators is hilarious, if a touch overextended.

Soon thereafter, Pi and his family and many of their animals plan to emigrate to Canada on a Japanese freighter, but partway through their voyage the ship sinks. The disaster strands Pi in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, on a lifeboat with a seasick orangutan, a wounded zebra, a frenetic hyena and an eerily placid Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.

By this point, two things are clear: 1) that "Life of Pi" is very difficult to stop reading, and 2) that none of its details is a throwaway, least of all a tiger named Richard Parker. Explanation comes by way of an interesting sub- story, one of many well-placed digressions. Another is the grimly memorable lesson Pi's father once taught him about the dangers of tigers.

And a third, which synthesizes those others, is the moment in the lifeboat when Richard Parker first lays eyes on Pi and the narrator considers himself a goner. Martel imparts a great pang of suspense -- made all the more titillating by what follows, a nuanced and absorbing description of the animal's sublime beauty.

After some unsparingly gory conflict in the boat, Pi and Richard Parker are left alone together. It spoils nothing to say that they coexist on the open ocean for more than 200 days. ("A story is always better appreciated if its ending is known first," the author states in a disclaimer early on.)

As Pi somehow finds the resources to sustain his life, Martel finds the wherewithal to sustain the spirit and vitality of his narration. The sense that this is not a coincidence provides much of the book's delight.

Splashing through the story, like the sea creatures swirling around Pi's besieged vessel, are abundant epiphanies -- some shimmering just below the surface, others lurking but less visible. Martel's prose is suitably buoyant throughout. How nimbly he navigates through an examination of natural and religious order, of the comforts of containment and the chilling prospects of freedom. One might infer plenty of influences from the author's mannerisms, but his creed is his own: Martel puts his faith in the act of storytelling.

Though it's still difficult to stop reading when the pages run out, Martel closes the book elegantly. (A good thing, too. As Pi puts it, "What a terrible thing it is to botch a farewell.") At the end of his ordeal, Pi's story seems so fantastic that people refuse to believe it -- so he decides to revise accordingly.

"Life of Pi" may or may not make its readers believe in God, but they will surely want to believe in Pi Patel. Thanks to Martel's handling, his story is the sort of novel one might share with one's children (of appropriate age), confident in its power to nudge them toward becoming properly curious lovers of books and life.

Jonathan Kiefer is a Berkeley writer.

This article appeared on page RV - 3 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/06/23/RV18924.DTL#ixzz0QKokK7TE

Read More......

Quote on Art and Literature

    "There is only one school of literature - that of talent."
~ Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)



Want to subscribe?

Subscribe in a reader Or, subscribe via email:
Enter your email here:

Top Blogs Top Arts blogs

Google