USA TODAY US Edition

Langdon goes on the hunt again in ‘Origin’

You might come away feeling a little smarter, but it needs more evolution

- BRIAN TRUITT BOOK REVIEW

Here’s a disappoint­ing revelation: Dan Brown’s latest novel, Origin (Doubleday, 480 pages, eegE out of four), is only a fitfully entertaini­ng religious rehash of his greatest hits.

Loyal fans of his globetrott­ing symbologis­t Robert Langdon will no doubt be thrilled with the fifth book in the series.

But despite exploring some seriously big concepts about creation and destiny in its Spanish-set central mystery, Origin spawns a dizzying parade of scientific jargon, non-stop travelogue­s and familiar tropes that all lead to a fumbled ending.

After tussling with the Illuminati, hunting for the Holy Grail and almost falling victim to a deadly plague, you’d think Langdon ( The Da Vinci Code, etc.) would just stay home and not tempt fate. Instead the heroic Harvard professor doesn’t think twice about jetting off to Bilbao when his old student, Edmond Kirsch, invites him to a potentiall­y Internet-breaking presentati­on at the Guggenheim Museum.

A 40-year-old iconoclast­ic futurist, Kirsch has already created a dust-up with global spiritual leaders after a sneak peek of a new discovery that may answer the questions, “Where did we come from?” and “Where are we going?” He has invited his old teacher to the worldwide unveiling, which is not unlike an overthe-top iPhone announceme­nt. “The age of religion is drawing to a close,” the enigmatic Kirsch says, “and the age of science is dawning.”

Huge if true, right?

Well, just before he’s about to get to the good part, Kirsch is assassinat­ed. His death kicks off Langdon’s new mission to find out who killed him and to crack the late genius’ computer password (a 47-character line of poetry) so the world can hear this controvers­ial news.

Origin follows the Brown template to a fault. Shady murderer with mysterious associatio­ns? Check. Female partner playing an integral part in saving the day? Check. (Museum director Ambra Vidal also happens to be the fiancée of Spain’s crown prince.) Exposition-filled plane rides and plenty of chapter-ending cliffhange­rs? Check and check.

To his credit, Brown throws in some contempora­ry touches. A Wikileaks-like conspiracy website is used as a plot device, and one of the main characters is a helpful artificial intelligen­ce named Winston. Designed by Kirsch, he’s a combo of Siri and Batman’s butler Alfred, who robo-splains Darwin and other scientific know-how to Langdon and Ambra on their journey, which involves visits to cathedrals and super-computing centers.

As with Brown’s other Langdon books, you do come away feeling a little smarter as his cast stops by such famed Barcelona sites as the Sagrada Familia and the Casa Mila, digs into the art style of Joan Miró and studies the literary nuances of William Blake and Friedrich Nietzsche. But Origin eschews the usual rousing ending for an overlong denouement and a finale that’s just puzzling — and not in a fun Da Vinci Code way.

Tackling the scientific and philosophi­cal underpinni­ngs of God’s role (or lack thereof, depending on your beliefs) in our existence within an actionadve­nture is an idea full of fascinatin­g potential.

Unfortunat­ely with Origin, Brown’s theory needs more evolution.

 ?? JONATHAN PRIME ?? Felicity Jones and Tom Hanks star in Inferno, another of Dan Brown’s best-selling novels that was turned into a movie.
JONATHAN PRIME Felicity Jones and Tom Hanks star in Inferno, another of Dan Brown’s best-selling novels that was turned into a movie.
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 ?? AP ?? Author Dan Brown
AP Author Dan Brown

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