To enigmatic phenomena of literature include bestsellers: Why is this book successful? Why are people in bookstores queuing for this? What does it have that ors don't have? In our column "The commented edition" Search for wirnach reasons.
Perhaps hardly anything is as easy to explain as DerErfolg by Dan Brown. More than 200 million copies, 1964 Geboreneamerikanische thriller author of his series around ermittelndenSymbolforscher Robert Langdon has now sold worldwide, translates books in 56 languages. The principle is not only mass-compatible, but also effective across cultures.
With Origin, fifth volume is now shot at top of bestseller lists. And who has yet succeeded in ignoring Langdon Adventures, demsollte clue suffices that code-breaking professor in Verfilmungenvon Browns thrillers is quite aptly manned with Tom Hanks: Eineeinigermaßen suitable personification of Its biederkeits degree. In or words, Indiana Jones and James Bond are a different house number. Interessantübrigens in this context that just male reviewers often eherverschnupft to Dan Brown (one of m even betrayed dissolution of origin in face of goldenenRegel of crime and thriller Meeting.).
But at this point, however, it is not a question of wher and why perhaps at a certain layer of male readers bildungsbeflissene sex Beißreflexeprovozieren, but about secret of success. This, in turn, naturally has a auchjede amount to do with mysteries and ir decryption. In Fallvon origin with nothing less than great mysteries of our existence: Wokommen we come here? Where are we going? In Brown's most recent book, a famoserSupercomputer has solved se human riddles, now you have to elicit answers only, because foolishly just before ir disclosure a Mörderdazwischengrätscht.
Date Of Update: 24 October 2017, 12:03