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Angels & Demons

Angels & Demons is a 2000 bestselling mystery-thriller novel written by American author Dan Brown and published by Pocket Books and then by Corgi Books. The novel introduces the character Robert Langdon, who recurs as the protagonist of Brown's subsequent novels. Angels & Demons shares many stylistic literary elements with its sequels, such as conspiracies of secret societies, a single-day time frame, and the Catholic Church. Ancient history, architecture, and symbology are also heavily referenced throughout the book. A film adaptation was released on May 15, 2009.

Angels & Demons
First edition cover
AuthorDan Brown
CountryUnited States
United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesRobert Langdon #1
GenreMystery-thriller
Publication date
May 2000
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages768
ISBN0-671-02735-2 (US) / 9780552160896 (UK)
OCLC52990309
813/.54 21
LC ClassPS3552.R685434 A82 2000
Followed byThe Da Vinci Code 

Background edit

The book contains several ambigrams created by real-life typographer John Langdon.[1] Besides the "Angels & Demons" and "Illuminati" designs, the title of the book is also presented as an ambigram on the hardcover book jacket, and on the inside cover of the paperback versions. The book also contains ambigrams of the words Earth, Air, Fire, and Water, which has served to bring the art of ambigrams to public attention by virtue of the popularity of the book.[2] The "Illuminati Diamond" mentioned in the book is an ambigram of the four elements that are arranged in the shape of a diamond.[1]

Plot edit

Leonardo Vetra, one of CERN's top physicists who have discovered how to create antimatter, is murdered, his chest branded with an ambigram of the word "Illuminati", an ancient anti-religious organization thought extinct. CERN director Maximilian Kohler calls Vetra's adopted daughter, Vittoria, and Harvard University Professor Robert Langdon, an expert on symbology and religious history, for help. After determining the ambigram is authentic, they discover that a canister of antimatter from Leonardo's lab, which has been stolen, will explode in 24 hours when the canister's battery runs out. Langdon and Vittoria go to Vatican City, where four Preferiti, the Cardinals who are the favorite candidates for Pope, are kidnapped by the Hassassin, who plans to blow up the Vatican with the antimatter canister and kill the four cardinals under the orders of "Janus", the leader of the Illuminati.

Believing that the four cardinals will be ritually murdered on the four altars of the "Path of Illumination", Langdon and Vittoria follow a series of clues left in various churches in and around Rome. After finding the first two men dead (one suffocated by earth and another whose lungs were punctured), they confront the assassin in the act of murdering the third. However, they fail to save the third cardinal and, as the location catches fire, the assassin kidnaps Vittoria. Langdon also fails to save the last cardinal, who is drowned in the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi, and confronts the assassin in the Castel Sant' Angelo, the Church of Illumination. Langdon frees Vittoria and together they send the assassin falling several hundred feet to his death.

Meanwhile, Kohler arrives to confront Camerlengo Carlo Ventresca, the late Pope's closest aide. Fearing Kohler is Janus, the two hurry back to St. Peter's Basilica. However, the Swiss Guards intervene and open fire on Kohler when Ventresca screams. Just before he dies, Kohler gives Langdon a mini video camera which records his confrontation with Ventresca. With Langdon in pursuit, Ventresca ventures into the catacombs and finds the canister atop the tomb of Saint Peter. Ventresca takes the canister to a safe height in a helicopter and parachutes safely just as the canister explodes in the sky. Reacting to this "miracle", the Cardinals debate whether to elect Ventresca as the new Pope. Meanwhile, Langdon learns from the video that Ventresca himself is Janus, and that he worked to sabotage the conclave. He confesses that he poisoned the Pope upon the Pope's revelation that he had fathered a child, and opposes Vetra's attempt to bridge science and God. Under the guise of Janus, he recruited the assassin to kill Vetra, steal the antimatter, and kidnap and murder the Preferiti.

Cardinal Saverio Mortati, Dean of the College of Cardinals, reveals that Ventresca is, in fact, the late Pope's biological son, conceived with a nun through artificial insemination. Overcome with guilt, Ventresca soaks himself in oil and sets himself on fire before a crowd of onlookers in St. Peter's Square. Mortati is unanimously elected Pope by the Cardinals, and Langdon and Vittoria reunite at Hotel Bernini where they spend the night together.

Characters edit

  • Robert Langdon: A professor of symbology at Harvard University and the protagonist of the novel. He is flown to CERN to help investigate the murder of Leonardo Vetra. He is described as wearing a Harris Tweed jacket, a turtleneck sweater, and a pair of chino pants. His name is a tribute to John Langdon.
  • Leonardo Vetra: A scientist working at CERN and a priest. He is researching on antimatter when he is murdered by the assassin. He is also the adoptive father of Vittoria.
  • Vittoria Vetra: The adopted daughter of Vetra. She, like her father, works with CERN. She is a strict vegetarian. Her research focuses on biology and physics. The reader learns early in the novel that Vittoria worked with her father in their research of antimatter.
  • Camerlengo Carlo Ventresca: The Camerlengo (papal chamberlain) during the conclave. He murdered the pope, who is later revealed to have been his biological father. His code name for dealing with the assassin is "Janus," taken from the two-faced Roman god of beginnings and ends.
  • Cardinal Saverio Mortati: The most senior cardinal in the conclave, and the current Dean of the College of Cardinals. He was the Devil's Advocate for the late pope.
  • Commander Ernesto Olivetti: The commandant of the Swiss Guard. He is initially skeptical about the claims of Langdon and Vittoria until he talks with the assassin. He, along with other Swiss Guards, searches desperately for the missing antimatter hidden somewhere in the Vatican. He is killed by the assassin at the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria.
  • Captain Elias Rocher: The second-in-command after Commander Olivetti. He is contacted by Maximilian Kohler about his knowledge on the real cause of the events. He is killed by Lt. Chartrand, who was under the impression that Rocher was an Illuminatus.
  • Hassassin: The killer hired by Janus to fulfill his plans. He is of Middle Eastern origin and displays his sadistic lust for women throughout the novel. He murders Leonardo Vetra, the Preferiti, and Commander Olivetti. He dies after being pushed from a balcony by Langdon at Castel Sant'Angelo and breaking his back on a pile of cannonballs below.
  • Maximilian Kohler: The director of CERN. He is feared at CERN despite his paralysis. His wheelchair contains electronic gadgets such as a computer, telephone, pager, video camera, and a gun. He contacts Langdon to help him find the killer of his friend, Leonardo Vetra. He blames the Church for his disability, due to his highly religious parents denying him medical care as a child and becomes a scientist as a way to rebel.
  • Gunther Glick and Chinita Macri: A reporter and his photojournalist for the BBC. They are contacted by the assassin regarding the events happening in the Vatican. Glick has a notorious reputation as a sensationalist and conspiracy theorist journalist. Macri, meanwhile, is a veteran camerawoman and a foil to Glick. They have the first hand account on the events in the novel, from the beginning of the conclave to the election of Mortati as pope.
  • Lieutenant Chartrand: A young Swiss Guard. He, together with Commander Olivetti and Capt. Rocher, searches desperately for the antimatter hidden somewhere in the Vatican. He shoots and kills Captain Rocher after he is mistaken as an Illuminatus. Near the end of the novel, he is sent by the new pope to give the Illuminati Diamond to Langdon on indefinite loan.
  • Cardinal Ebner: One of the four preferiti from Frankfurt, Germany. He is killed by smothering, via dirt and soil forced into his mouth.
  • Cardinal Lamassé: One of the four preferiti from Paris, France. He is killed by punctures to his lungs from which he bled to death.
  • Cardinal Guidera: One of the four preferiti from Barcelona, Spain. He is burned alive.
  • Cardinal Baggia: One of the four preferiti from Milan, Italy; the favorite to succeed as the new pope. He is drowned by the assassin.

Inaccuracies edit

The book's first edition contained numerous inaccuracies of location of places in Rome, as well as incorrect uses of Italian language. Some of the language issues were corrected in the following editions.[3]

Aside from the explicit introduction, the book depicts various fictional experts explaining matters in science, technology, and history in which critics have pointed out inaccuracies. An example of this is the antimatter discussions, wherein the book suggests that antimatter can be produced in useful and practical quantities and will be a limitless source of power. CERN published an FAQ page about Angels & Demons on their website stating that antimatter cannot be used as an energy source because creating it takes more energy than it produces.[4]

Angels & Demons Decoded, a documentary on the American cable television network, The History Channel, premiered on May 10, 2009, shortly before the release of the novel's film adaptation. The documentary explores the various bases of the novel's story, as well as its inaccuracies. A CERN official, for example, points out that over the last 20 years, approximately 10 billionths of a gram of antimatter has been produced at the facility, whose explosive yield is equivalent to that of a firecracker, far less than is needed for it to be the threat depicted in the novel.[5]

According to The Boston Globe language columnist Ben Zimmer, the Devil's Advocate, which is indicated in the novel to have a role in the selection of the pope, has nothing to do with the papal conclave, and was instead employed to present arguments against the proposed canonization of a person as a saint. Zimmer adds that the Devil's Advocate was abolished by Pope John Paul II in 1983, 17 years before the novel was published.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Angels & Demons" November 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. www.johnlangdon.net. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  2. ^ . Ambigram Magazine. April 20, 2009. Archived from the original on March 16, 2010. Retrieved April 21, 2009.
  3. ^ "Angeli e Demoni di Dan Brown". Il Piacere Della Lettura. 2006. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  4. ^ . CERN. Archived from the original on July 10, 2015. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  5. ^ Comtois, David; Hartford, Scott (Writers). Angels & Demons Decoded. May 10, 2009. The History Channel.
  6. ^ Martin, Rachel (March 3, 2013). "Who Is The 'Devil's Advocate'?" NPR.

Sources edit

  • Burstein, Dan (ed). Secrets of Angels & Demons: The unauthorized guide to the bestselling novel, 2004, CDS Books. ISBN 1-59315-140-3, Collection of many essays by world-class historians and other experts, discussing the fact & fiction of the novel
  • Angels and Demons Draws Tourists to Rome, January 20, 2005, NPR
  • CERN's own page about fact and fiction in the novel
  • Book 'Antimatter, The Ultimate Mirror' ISBN 978-0-521-89309-1

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official UK website
  • CERN Angels-and-Demons website

angels, demons, this, article, about, novel, film, film, other, uses, disambiguation, 2000, bestselling, mystery, thriller, novel, written, american, author, brown, published, pocket, books, then, corgi, books, novel, introduces, character, robert, langdon, re. This article is about the novel Angels amp Demons For the film see Angels amp Demons film For other uses see Angels amp Demons disambiguation Angels amp Demons is a 2000 bestselling mystery thriller novel written by American author Dan Brown and published by Pocket Books and then by Corgi Books The novel introduces the character Robert Langdon who recurs as the protagonist of Brown s subsequent novels Angels amp Demons shares many stylistic literary elements with its sequels such as conspiracies of secret societies a single day time frame and the Catholic Church Ancient history architecture and symbology are also heavily referenced throughout the book A film adaptation was released on May 15 2009 Angels amp DemonsFirst edition coverAuthorDan BrownCountryUnited StatesUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishSeriesRobert Langdon 1GenreMystery thrillerPublication dateMay 2000Media typePrint hardback amp paperback Pages768ISBN0 671 02735 2 US 9780552160896 UK OCLC52990309Dewey Decimal813 54 21LC ClassPS3552 R685434 A82 2000Followed byThe Da Vinci Code Contents 1 Background 2 Plot 3 Characters 4 Inaccuracies 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBackground editThe book contains several ambigrams created by real life typographer John Langdon 1 Besides the Angels amp Demons and Illuminati designs the title of the book is also presented as an ambigram on the hardcover book jacket and on the inside cover of the paperback versions The book also contains ambigrams of the words Earth Air Fire and Water which has served to bring the art of ambigrams to public attention by virtue of the popularity of the book 2 The Illuminati Diamond mentioned in the book is an ambigram of the four elements that are arranged in the shape of a diamond 1 Plot editLeonardo Vetra one of CERN s top physicists who have discovered how to create antimatter is murdered his chest branded with an ambigram of the word Illuminati an ancient anti religious organization thought extinct CERN director Maximilian Kohler calls Vetra s adopted daughter Vittoria and Harvard University Professor Robert Langdon an expert on symbology and religious history for help After determining the ambigram is authentic they discover that a canister of antimatter from Leonardo s lab which has been stolen will explode in 24 hours when the canister s battery runs out Langdon and Vittoria go to Vatican City where four Preferiti the Cardinals who are the favorite candidates for Pope are kidnapped by the Hassassin who plans to blow up the Vatican with the antimatter canister and kill the four cardinals under the orders of Janus the leader of the Illuminati Believing that the four cardinals will be ritually murdered on the four altars of the Path of Illumination Langdon and Vittoria follow a series of clues left in various churches in and around Rome After finding the first two men dead one suffocated by earth and another whose lungs were punctured they confront the assassin in the act of murdering the third However they fail to save the third cardinal and as the location catches fire the assassin kidnaps Vittoria Langdon also fails to save the last cardinal who is drowned in the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi and confronts the assassin in the Castel Sant Angelo the Church of Illumination Langdon frees Vittoria and together they send the assassin falling several hundred feet to his death Meanwhile Kohler arrives to confront Camerlengo Carlo Ventresca the late Pope s closest aide Fearing Kohler is Janus the two hurry back to St Peter s Basilica However the Swiss Guards intervene and open fire on Kohler when Ventresca screams Just before he dies Kohler gives Langdon a mini video camera which records his confrontation with Ventresca With Langdon in pursuit Ventresca ventures into the catacombs and finds the canister atop the tomb of Saint Peter Ventresca takes the canister to a safe height in a helicopter and parachutes safely just as the canister explodes in the sky Reacting to this miracle the Cardinals debate whether to elect Ventresca as the new Pope Meanwhile Langdon learns from the video that Ventresca himself is Janus and that he worked to sabotage the conclave He confesses that he poisoned the Pope upon the Pope s revelation that he had fathered a child and opposes Vetra s attempt to bridge science and God Under the guise of Janus he recruited the assassin to kill Vetra steal the antimatter and kidnap and murder the Preferiti Cardinal Saverio Mortati Dean of the College of Cardinals reveals that Ventresca is in fact the late Pope s biological son conceived with a nun through artificial insemination Overcome with guilt Ventresca soaks himself in oil and sets himself on fire before a crowd of onlookers in St Peter s Square Mortati is unanimously elected Pope by the Cardinals and Langdon and Vittoria reunite at Hotel Bernini where they spend the night together Characters editRobert Langdon A professor of symbology at Harvard University and the protagonist of the novel He is flown to CERN to help investigate the murder of Leonardo Vetra He is described as wearing a Harris Tweed jacket a turtleneck sweater and a pair of chino pants His name is a tribute to John Langdon Leonardo Vetra A scientist working at CERN and a priest He is researching on antimatter when he is murdered by the assassin He is also the adoptive father of Vittoria Vittoria Vetra The adopted daughter of Vetra She like her father works with CERN She is a strict vegetarian Her research focuses on biology and physics The reader learns early in the novel that Vittoria worked with her father in their research of antimatter Camerlengo Carlo Ventresca The Camerlengo papal chamberlain during the conclave He murdered the pope who is later revealed to have been his biological father His code name for dealing with the assassin is Janus taken from the two faced Roman god of beginnings and ends Cardinal Saverio Mortati The most senior cardinal in the conclave and the current Dean of the College of Cardinals He was the Devil s Advocate for the late pope Commander Ernesto Olivetti The commandant of the Swiss Guard He is initially skeptical about the claims of Langdon and Vittoria until he talks with the assassin He along with other Swiss Guards searches desperately for the missing antimatter hidden somewhere in the Vatican He is killed by the assassin at the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria Captain Elias Rocher The second in command after Commander Olivetti He is contacted by Maximilian Kohler about his knowledge on the real cause of the events He is killed by Lt Chartrand who was under the impression that Rocher was an Illuminatus Hassassin The killer hired by Janus to fulfill his plans He is of Middle Eastern origin and displays his sadistic lust for women throughout the novel He murders Leonardo Vetra the Preferiti and Commander Olivetti He dies after being pushed from a balcony by Langdon at Castel Sant Angelo and breaking his back on a pile of cannonballs below Maximilian Kohler The director of CERN He is feared at CERN despite his paralysis His wheelchair contains electronic gadgets such as a computer telephone pager video camera and a gun He contacts Langdon to help him find the killer of his friend Leonardo Vetra He blames the Church for his disability due to his highly religious parents denying him medical care as a child and becomes a scientist as a way to rebel Gunther Glick and Chinita Macri A reporter and his photojournalist for the BBC They are contacted by the assassin regarding the events happening in the Vatican Glick has a notorious reputation as a sensationalist and conspiracy theorist journalist Macri meanwhile is a veteran camerawoman and a foil to Glick They have the first hand account on the events in the novel from the beginning of the conclave to the election of Mortati as pope Lieutenant Chartrand A young Swiss Guard He together with Commander Olivetti and Capt Rocher searches desperately for the antimatter hidden somewhere in the Vatican He shoots and kills Captain Rocher after he is mistaken as an Illuminatus Near the end of the novel he is sent by the new pope to give the Illuminati Diamond to Langdon on indefinite loan Cardinal Ebner One of the four preferiti from Frankfurt Germany He is killed by smothering via dirt and soil forced into his mouth Cardinal Lamasse One of the four preferiti from Paris France He is killed by punctures to his lungs from which he bled to death Cardinal Guidera One of the four preferiti from Barcelona Spain He is burned alive Cardinal Baggia One of the four preferiti from Milan Italy the favorite to succeed as the new pope He is drowned by the assassin Inaccuracies editThe book s first edition contained numerous inaccuracies of location of places in Rome as well as incorrect uses of Italian language Some of the language issues were corrected in the following editions 3 Aside from the explicit introduction the book depicts various fictional experts explaining matters in science technology and history in which critics have pointed out inaccuracies An example of this is the antimatter discussions wherein the book suggests that antimatter can be produced in useful and practical quantities and will be a limitless source of power CERN published an FAQ page about Angels amp Demons on their website stating that antimatter cannot be used as an energy source because creating it takes more energy than it produces 4 Angels amp Demons Decoded a documentary on the American cable television network The History Channel premiered on May 10 2009 shortly before the release of the novel s film adaptation The documentary explores the various bases of the novel s story as well as its inaccuracies A CERN official for example points out that over the last 20 years approximately 10 billionths of a gram of antimatter has been produced at the facility whose explosive yield is equivalent to that of a firecracker far less than is needed for it to be the threat depicted in the novel 5 According to The Boston Globe language columnist Ben Zimmer the Devil s Advocate which is indicated in the novel to have a role in the selection of the pope has nothing to do with the papal conclave and was instead employed to present arguments against the proposed canonization of a person as a saint Zimmer adds that the Devil s Advocate was abolished by Pope John Paul II in 1983 17 years before the novel was published 6 See also edit nbsp Novels portal Draper White thesis Particle accelerators in popular culture Gian Lorenzo BerniniReferences edit a b Angels amp Demons Archived November 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine www johnlangdon net Retrieved August 26 2013 The Ten Most Famous Ambigrams Ambigram Magazine April 20 2009 Archived from the original on March 16 2010 Retrieved April 21 2009 Angeli e Demoni di Dan Brown Il Piacere Della Lettura 2006 Retrieved August 26 2013 Can antimatter be used as an energy source CERN Archived from the original on July 10 2015 Retrieved August 3 2015 Comtois David Hartford Scott Writers Angels amp Demons Decoded May 10 2009 The History Channel Martin Rachel March 3 2013 Who Is The Devil s Advocate NPR Sources editBurstein Dan ed Secrets of Angels amp Demons The unauthorized guide to the bestselling novel 2004 CDS Books ISBN 1 59315 140 3 Collection of many essays by world class historians and other experts discussing the fact amp fiction of the novel Angels and Demons Draws Tourists to Rome January 20 2005 NPR CERN s own page about fact and fiction in the novel Angels and Demons Movie News Site Path of Illumination with photos of the places of Angels amp Demons Dan Brown s own page Book Antimatter The Ultimate Mirror ISBN 978 0 521 89309 1External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Angels and Demons nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Angels amp Demons Official website Official UK website CERN Angels and Demons website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Angels 26 Demons amp oldid 1222972839 Path of Illumination, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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