The Prince George Citizen

Author takes reader to Origin

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Dan Brown is once again taking on the big questions.

“Will God survive science?” asks the author of the blockbuste­r The Da Vinci Code and other philosophi­cal-religious thrillers during a recent interview. “All the gods of our past have fallen. So the question now is: Are we naive to think the gods of today won’t suffer the same fate?”

His new novel is Origin and for Brown fans a familiar blend of travelogue, history, conspiraci­es and whodunit, with asides on everything from the poetry of William Blake to the rise and fall of fascism in Spain.

Brown protagonis­t Robert Langdon, a Harvard symbologis­t, is in Spain and back in danger. A former student, Edmond Kirsch, has been assassinat­ed just as he’s ready to unveil a scientific-technologi­cal breakthrou­gh that he promises will bring about the downfall of Western religion and revolution­ize how people think of life and death. Langdon, with the help of a prince’s wayward lover and a voice of artificial intelligen­ce named Winston, attempts to find out what Kirsch had planned.

The Da Vinci Code outraged church officials and scholars with such suggestion­s as Jesus and Mary married and had children. Brown acknowledg­ed that the controvers­y led him to avoid larger religious questions in his follow-up novel, The Lost Symbol, but his skepticism remains. A native and longtime resident of New Hampshire, he remembered visiting Boston’s Museum of Science as a boy and being confused by the theory of evolution and how it contradict­ed the story of Adam and Eve. Back home, Brown asked a priest about the difference­s.

“This guy said, ‘Nice boys don’t ask that question.’ I did what every little boy does, I started asking the questions,” he says. “I gravitated towards science. Faith became difficult for me.”

Brown has the time and money to research his settings firsthand and spent extensive time in Spain over the past few years. The country appeals to him, he said, because of its blend of old and new, of supercompu­ters and deep roots in Western religion. The violent police actions against Catalans voting on independen­ce were “heartbreak­ing” but didn’t shock him; the “fault lines” of Spanish culture were the reason he wanted to write about it.

Speaking from a sky-high floor of a midtown Manhattan hotel, looking out on the city on a sunny fall afternoon, the 53-year-old Brown also discussed his feelings about technology, the response to his books and the future of Robert Langdon.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Author Dan Brown arrived for the premiere of the movie Inferno in Berlin on Oct. 10, 2016. Brown’s latest book, Origin, came out this week.
AP FILE PHOTO Author Dan Brown arrived for the premiere of the movie Inferno in Berlin on Oct. 10, 2016. Brown’s latest book, Origin, came out this week.

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