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To: Cincinatus
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'Da Vinci Code' best seller gets first challenge

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — "The Da Vinci Code," a thriller by a relatively unknown author, is a best seller.

It has boosted the profile of New Hampshire author Dan Brown -- and it's brought him his first literary challenge.

Author Lewis Perdue says that Brown's story, which explores codes hidden in Leonardo Da Vinci's artwork and a closely guarded secret involving the Roman Catholic Church, has similarities to Perdue's "Daughter of God," published in 2000.

Last week, Perdue sent a letter to Doubleday, Brown's publisher. While religious themes, secrets and conspiracies aren't newcomers to popular fiction, Perdue said he was seeing too many of his own ideas in "The Da Vinci Code," Brown's fourth novel.

"There are far too many parallels between the two books for it to be an accident," Perdue said Monday in an interview from north Lake Tahoe, where he is on vacation. "We've decided to take legal action."

Brown said that until last week, he had never heard of Perdue, who has written about a dozen books, including "The Da Vinci Legacy," which deals with a church secret involving the illegitimate offspring of St. Peter. Brown said he has not read any of Perdue's books.

Brown's protagonist, who made his debut in a previous novel, is a professor who studies religious symbols. Perdue's hero is a professor of religion. Brown's heroine is a cryptologist; Perdue's is an expert specializing in art forgery. Both deal with curator deaths.

Both books also deal with a secret that the church wants to keep under wraps.

"To me, the biggest smoking gun is there is a painting which contains, physically, a gold key, which leads to a safe deposit box in a Zurich bank, which contains the ultimate clue leading to the treasure," said Perdue. "And the two people retrieve this from the safe deposit box as the bad guys are closing in and they escape by the skin of their teeth."

Brown's book includes a scene where the cryptologist finds a gold key behind a painting, which leads her and the professor on a harrowing journey to a safe deposit box in a Paris Swiss bank.

"Swiss bank accounts are so often in thrillers they are cliche," said Brown, who added that there are limited places to hide a key in an art museum.

Brown said his first book about his professor, "Angels and Demons," came out before "Daughter of God." Perdue said "Daughter of God" is a re-edit of his 1985 book, "The Linz Testament," with the same hero but with a different name.

39 posted on 04/23/2004 10:04:47 AM PDT by theFIRMbss
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To: theFIRMbss
So not only is Brown now pretty well analyzed as a somewhat sinester Pagan propagandist who retreats behind others claiming "its just a novel" while promoting it as really all true but, it is beginning to appear as though he may have plagerized the whole story.

How rich

Its like the case of Arming America where the leftist lost his Bancroft Prize for history when it turned out his research was fabricated to prove his theory.

43 posted on 04/23/2004 10:20:52 AM PDT by KC Burke (Men of intemperate minds can never be free....)
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To: theFIRMbss
Interesting to note Clive Cussler's endorsement on the front of Perdue's book. His endorsement (if memory serves) is also on the back of The DaVinci Code. You would think he would have noticed the resemblance. Clive Cussler, by the way, is the novelist/adventurer who found the Hunley and many other lost ships.
44 posted on 04/23/2004 12:35:18 PM PDT by Drawsing (I want my fo'ty fo' cents!)
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