Division IX Organizations

Inferno by Dan Brown Book Review | The Librarian Who Doesn't Say …

Now, admittedly, I enjoyed this formula in the first two books. Paris! Rome! Art! Adventure! A nerdy professor protagonist! Dan Brown made me want to roam around Rome and look at the back of the Mona Lisa. I thought I liked ...

Dan Brown: Just wait and see

The last time Dan Brown visited the Freemasons' Hall in Central London, he was discreetly researching his 2003 bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code. A decade later, the New Hampshire-based author is launching his latest blockbuster, Inferno (Random ...

Dan Brown Knows the Door Is Open for Masonic Membe – Masonic …

Inferno introduces The Consortium, a secretive organisation pulling strings behind the scenes which the book claims is an amalgamation of real groups. Yet Brown sees the Masons as an entirely benign fraternity.

Dan Brown breaks out of his dark little world and into the Freemasons' Hall

Dan Brown declined to reveal any “spoilers” from his new bestseller, Inferno, when he entertained 1,500 fans during a public appearance at the Freemasons' Hall this week. But who does the Da Vinci Code author read for fun? “I'm fascinated by Malcolm ...

The Freemasons' Code: Dan Brown reveals the message that told him the door …

His best-selling novels illuminate the shadowy organisations that supposedly run the world. But Dan Brown was “honoured” to receive an invitation to join the Freemasons, the arcane fraternity whose tentacles are said to extend into the highest echelons ...

Inferno author Dan Brown 'honoured' to be invited to join the Freemasons

His best-selling novels illuminate the shadowy organisations that supposedly run the world. But Dan Brown was “honoured” to receive an invitation to join the Freemasons, the arcane fraternity whose tentacles are said to extend into the highest echelons ...

Dan Brown has 'no doubt' 'Inferno' will be a movie – USA Today

"It's a very complicated plot," he says of Symbol, about a kidnapper in Washington, D.C., who uses Masonic symbols as clues. INTERVIEW:How Dante inspired Dan Brown. REVIEW:'Inferno' is one hell of a good read. MORE:Clive James on Brown: 'I pity him ...