If ever there was an example of pedestrial, banal, writing garnering huge success, it was The DaVinci Code. Leaving aside the issue of being offensive religiously, it was poorly organized, the dialog was C- grade senior in high school at best and was pseudo-didactic to the point of nausea. The sequence of events that took place in short period of time was wholly implausible. I didn’t understand then, and I still can’t understand why people bought it and read it. Librarians I have spoken with felt the same. Angels and Demons, which Iread in a little under two hours standing in the book section of a Target store, (the vocabulary is almost fifth grade) is dumber yet. The historical speculations in both books are old, old hat most of us got in general reading in college survey courses (if you read some of the extra reading in the syllabi.) Who doesn’t know about the centuries old argument over ultimate responsibility for the murder of the Knights Templar, for example?