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Like a book club, except with more sex! ([info]notjo) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2009-09-20 18:29:00


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I doubt your committment to edginess
Once, long ago, an author released a book unto the world. And this book was considered to be awful by many many many critics, to the point where much parody was made of the author, the book, and the fans. This mockery ramped up when a movie was made, and even more people were introduced to the author. And, of course, all truly "hip" readers turned up their noses, refusing to call that... that... tripe... literature.

I am, of course, talking about Dan Brown.

Over at
Literary Tattoos, Loosma writes:

I love Dan Brown, particularly his Robert Langdon series and I have huge respect for him and his research for his new book The Lost Symbol. I'm reading that now and I'm having a hard time putting it down but there are some great quotes in here. I keep wanting to highlight them and come back because sometimes I come across a sentence that hits me hard just because it relates to me in a way. As do everyone when they tattoo a quote or lyric or whatever on their body

Anyway, so really if any readers of those books have gotten a tattoo relating to the plot or through some quote in there? Especially puzzle lovers? lol



Marvel at the pretentiousness, when we're assured that people are basically sheep and only the amazing folks at Literary Tattoos are capable of sorting that a dancing dog isn't that big a deal.

Be assured that a book is no longer any good once it's popular.

Discuss how Brown does research wrong! Have other people insist that Dan Brown actually does lots of research and is very accurate! (I skipped that, because I am an historian who lives with a theologian, so LOL NO)

OMG! Everyone is so meeen! - not from the OP, although she agrees. More MEEEN!

The OP ultimate tacks on her flounce, in bold:
Ok ok! I got the message! Dan Brown sucks, I have horrible literary sense, the oprah book club thing is probably I something should check into, etc etc etc. Anyway, everyone is entitled to their opinion, regardless of how polite or bitchy it was presented but to each their own.



I just want you all to know that I hated Dan Brown before it was "in" to hate Dan Brown. I bet it's now ~edgy~ to be scholar who loves Dan Brown for the plot, and I totes want to be ~edgy~. Dan Brown Forever! Go Robert Langdon!


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[info]stella_polaris
2009-09-21 05:15 pm UTC (link)
What about those of us who aren't snobs, but still hate Dan Brown?

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]snarkhunter
2009-09-21 05:19 pm UTC (link)
Oh, I'm one of you.

I just hate literary snobbery MORE than I hate Dan Brown.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]stella_polaris
2009-09-21 05:29 pm UTC (link)
I got called a literary snob because I hate Dan Brown :

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]big_bad_wolf
2009-09-24 04:58 pm UTC (link)
Same. It's like, I cannot possibly be a literary snob, Virginia Woolf was too hard for me.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]stella_polaris
2009-09-24 05:39 pm UTC (link)
Well, Woolf and Vonnegut are some of my favourite authors, but then again, so is Dick Francis, who writes detective novels, and I've read over 30 of his books. There's a difference between being a literature snob and knowing the difference between literature that has merit, literature that's purely for entertainment, and literature that is literature in the most loose sense of the word...

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]big_bad_wolf
2009-09-24 06:46 pm UTC (link)
Mmm, yeah, it's like - I like the Hardy Boys books but I am never going to try and convince people they're as well-written as Name of the Rose because THEY'RE NOT. Have you seen the little puff piece in The Times mocking Dan Brown's writing, and the AVALANCHE of defensive comments underneath? Priceless.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]dragonfangirl
2009-09-23 12:22 am UTC (link)
Yeah, I'm kinda with you. Dan Brown may be the literary underdog, but yanno, some people deserve to be underdogs.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


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