
Angels and Demons
by Dan Brown
Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon races through Rome to stop the Illuminati from destroying Vatican City with an antimatter bomb as a new Pope is being elected.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1964
Dan Brown is an American thriller writer whose Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons combined religious conspiracy and breakneck plotting to become global publishing phenomena.
Dan Brown spent years as a struggling musician and teacher before publishing his first novels to modest success. The Da Vinci Code, released in 2003, became one of the best-selling novels of all time — a thriller in which Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon races through Paris, London, and Scotland uncovering a conspiracy involving the Catholic Church, the Holy Grail, and the bloodline of Jesus Christ. Angels and Demons, published earlier but now usually read after The Da Vinci Code, sends Langdon to the Vatican to prevent an antimatter bomb from destroying the city while unraveling a battle between science and religion.
Brown’s strengths are his plotting mechanics: short chapters that end on cliffhangers, a constant stream of revelations, and a gift for embedding genuine art historical and architectural detail into his chase sequences. The books are genuinely hard to put down, and whatever literary critics say about them, the experience of reading them is purposeful and compulsive. Angels and Demons in particular benefits from a propulsive structure and a slightly more coherent conspiracy than its more famous successor.
The criticism is substantial and fair: Brown’s prose is often clunky, his characters are thin, his female leads are defined primarily by their relationship to Langdon, and his “facts” have been debunked repeatedly by historians and scientists. Several academics published entire books correcting the errors in The Da Vinci Code. Reading Brown requires accepting a kind of contract: suspend intellectual scrutiny and enjoy the ride. For millions of readers worldwide, that contract has been more than worth it.

by Dan Brown
Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon races through Rome to stop the Illuminati from destroying Vatican City with an antimatter bomb as a new Pope is being elected.
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by Dan Brown
A Harvard symbologist and a French cryptologist race through Paris and London decoding clues that lead to a secret that could shake the foundations of Christianity.
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by Dan Brown
Robert Langdon is called to Washington D.C. under false pretenses and plunged into a frantic one-night race through the Capitol's corridors of power. Freemason symbolism, Ancient Mysteries, and a villain whose identity reshapes the entire narrative — Brown's most American thriller.
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by Dan Brown
Robert Langdon wakes in a Florence hospital with no memory of the past two days and an assassin on his trail. Racing through the art-filled corridors of Florence, Venice, and Istanbul, he follows clues embedded in Dante's Inferno to unravel a plot with implications for the entire human species.
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by Dan Brown
Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon wakes in a Florence hospital with no memory of the past few days and must decode a mystery rooted in Dante's Inferno before a bioterrorist threat kills millions.
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Where to start with Dan Brown — whether to begin with Angels and Demons, The Da Vinci Code, or The Lost Symbol. A complete reading guide to the Robert Langdon series.
guide
The complete Dan Brown reading guide — all 4 Robert Langdon novels in order, with reading order recommendations and the films explained.
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If The Da Vinci Code's art history puzzles and secret societies kept you reading, these conspiracy thrillers deliver the same propulsive rush.
The Robert Langdon series reads well in any order, but publication order is: Angels & Demons (2000), The Da Vinci Code (2003), The Lost Symbol (2009), Inferno (2013), Origin (2017). Angels & Demons is chronologically first and introduces Langdon, though The Da Vinci Code is where most readers start.
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