By Stephen Jewell - Herald on Sunday June 2, 2013
Patient Dan Brown fans will have another long wait until he's finished his next book, writes Stephen Jewell
"The Da Vinci Code was a double-edged sword when it comes to research," Brown admits. "On the positive side, I now have access to specialist curators and secret locations that realistically I never would have without it.
"But, simultaneously, I'm always trying to keep my topic secret - but whenever I show up at any of these places, the next thing you know there's a blog saying, 'Dan Brown was just at the Freemasons' Hall and he was looking at this particular medallion or floor tile. I wonder what he's up to?'."
Brown is forced to play a game of subterfuge with his over-eager fans, drawing attention to unrelated aspects before quietly concentrating on his real quarry.
"It's like leaving breadcrumbs in a different direction, which seems to have worked so far," he laughs.
Inferno sold more than 225,000 hardbacks in the UK alone during its first week of release, so there's little prospect of the otherwise unassuming 48-year-old going unrecognised. Even if, as tonight, he's dressed in a smart black suit and not the trademark tweed jacket his main protagonist, Harvard symbology professor Robert Langdon, famously also favours.
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