The Louvre
The Da Vinci Code, I'm assuming you are talking about the book, is party fact. On the thrid page of the book it states that all the characters and events are fictional. But on page six it adds that all of the descriptions of artwork, arhcitecture, documents, and secret rituals in the novel are accurate.
No, Movies like the Da Vinci code are all based on fictional events. They are even located in the fiction section
The Da Vinci Code is a work of fiction, and it is not presented as a factual account. While the book includes real historical elements, the story itself is a creative interpretation by the author, Dan Brown.
The Da Vinci Code has been translated into approximately 40 languages, including Spanish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, and Russian. These translations have helped the book reach a global audience and become one of the best-selling novels of all time.
Basically all the Dan Brown books. Ex: Angels and Demons, The Lost Symbol, Deception Point, and Digital Fortress.
the story, of course, is invented by dan brown, but the holy grail, the priory of sion and the stuff about da vinci and Isaac newton are all true.
some yes, not all, it also depends on how religious you are.
The Da Vinci Code is a good read, but it is a fictional story written by Dan Brown. It has enough references to facts to make it seem real, which is probably the hallmark of good fiction.
If i remember rightly they stood for princess Sophie and something else. sorry that's all i can give you
The one thing you must remember is that for all intents and purposes, Dan Brown writes FICTION. Dan Brown is masterful at taking little known historical facts and places and making them 'fit' into his story. The Da Vinci Code does allude to Freemasonry but cleverly avoids drawing any direct lines into the theory. The theories that were borne out in the Da Vinci Code have been thoroughly debunked and to most intelligent people, well just a good yarn. The fact that some keep the idea alive just speaks volumes on how gullible some people can be. Dan Brown want to separate your money from your wallet, nothing more nothing less. Judging by the sales of his book, I would say he succeeded.
Paperback - 608 pages Illustrated 419 Hardcover 464 Kindle 496 (for all of us lucky folks)
If you our looking for a "can't put it down" book, all of Dan Browns are strongly recommended, i especially think 'the da vinci code' is riveting and exhilarating. If your looking for a children's book 'James and the giant peach' is great by Roald Dahl, and Shakespeare is wonderful, however quite confusing at first.