Have you read DAN BROWN’S Dan Vinci Code, if yes, then you should read these five blockbuster novels.
According to Wikipedia Daniel Gerhard Brown (born June 22, 1964) is an American author is best known for his thriller novels, including the Robert Langdon novels Angels & Demons (2000), The Da Vinci Code (2003), The Lost Symbol (2009), Inferno (2013) and Origin (2017).


Dan Brown the creator of  "Robert Langdon series" which also include angels and demons, the Dan Vinci Code, the lost symbol, inferno and origin. He has also written two standalone thrillers like deception point and digital fortress.

       His 2003 blockbuster novel the The Da Vinci Code is regarded as one of the most widely read novel of all times and has sold over 210 million copies worldwide and has been translated to more than 30 languages. The novels he stated on his website are anti-Christian books. The Dan Vinci Code has received heavy criticism from Christian around the word for portraying a non-celibate Jesus and Mary Magdalene.


HERE ARE TOP FIVE BOOKS YOU SHOULD READ IF YOU ARE TRULY A FAN OF THE DAN VINCI CODE


 1.     THE EIGHT By Katherine Neville

This international bestseller follows two timelines as it switches from the perspective of Catherine Veilis, a computer expert in the 1970s, to a pair of nuns 200 years before. Connecting them is a bejeweled chess set—hidden by the nuns during the French Revolution, which Catherine now seeks. Finding the set would unleash a centuries-old power, but Catherine will have to play a dangerous “Game” if she hopes to succeed.




 2.   THE CODEX by Douglas Preston
The Codex is a thriller novel by Douglas Preston and takes place in the Southwestern United States and Central America. The book was published on December 8, 2003 by Tor Books
The titular book is a Mayan artifact containing the sum of that people's knowledge about the medical applications of indigenous plants. The information is worth billions to any pharmaceutical company, but the Codex, along with numerous other priceless objects, was taken deep into the Honduran jungle by dying legendary tomb robber Maxwell Broadbent, to be buried along with him in a secret crypt.


     3.   The Lost Codex by Alan Jacobson
The lost codex is the third instalment of the OPSIG Team Black Novel following as sequel to Hard Target – the second instalment.
Jacobson’s entertaining third OPSIG Team Black novel (after 2012’s Hard Target) contains enough edge-of-your-seat action sequences to fill a handful of Mission Impossible movies. When the members of the Operations Support Intelligence Group, an elite black-ops unit run out of the Pentagon, break up a suicide bombing cell in Washington, D.C., they stumble across a plethora of international terrorist plots—but at the center of it all are ancient scrolls whose secrets, if made public, could change the global geopolitical landscape forever. Tasked with securing the artifacts, the group—which includes FBI profiler Karen Vail (the star of her own series); Special Forces operative Hector DeSantos; and Aaron Uziel, the head of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force in Washington—embark on a globe-hopping adventure that takes them to New York, London, Paris, and Tel Aviv. While some thriller fans may find the plot too over-the-top, this is an undeniable page-turner. 



         4. Mona Lisa Secrets by Phil Philips
Joey is the great-grandson of Vincenzo Peruggia, the man who stole the original Mona Lisa in 1911. Along with his girlfriend, Marie, an art connoisseur, he stumbles across his father's secret room and finds himself staring at what he thinks is a replica of da Vinci's most famous masterpiece.





1.     The Tenth Circle By Jon Land
A shadowy cabal is terrorizing the United States and is using a zealot reverend as their conduit. CIA agent Blaine McCracken is on a mission to stop them in their tracks, but in order to do so he must dive into two of history’s greatest mysteries. Author Jon Land draws fascinating parallels between the lost of colony of Roanoke and the missing crew of the Mary Celeste as McCracken comes face to face with a hell straight out of Dante’s Inferno.







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