Author Dan Brown talks about his recent court
dealings and movie surrounding his recent book 'The Da Vinci Code' in
Portsmouth, N.H., Sunday April 23, 2006. Brown spoke to a packed room of 900
people. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. - Though he's been hit with lawsuits and rebuffed by the
Vatican, author Dan Brown said Sunday it's not his responsibility to address
controversies stirred up by his book, "The Da Vinci Code."
He said he's
happy his best-selling novel about hidden religious history, secret societies
and code-breaking has captured popular interest, but leaves the deliberations to
others.
"Let the biblical scholars and historians battle it out," Brown told about
850 people at a sold-out writers talk.
"It's a book about big ideas, you can love them or you can hate them," he
said. "But we're all talking about them, and that's really the point."
The talk was a rare chance to catch a personal glimpse of the private author.
Among his revelations: When struggling with a difficult plot point, he dangles
from a pair of gravity boots to think it out ¡ª a habit adopted while figuring
out anagrams for his book "Angels and Demons."
The audience also learned that the former prep school English teacher wants
to return to the classroom, and that he rarely reads his work when it's done.
"The Da Vinci Code" was an exception.
"When the galleys came back, I sat down and I read the novel start to finish
in one sitting, and I was really happy, really proud of it," Brown said.
The book sold more than 40 million hardcover copies in three years in print.
The paperback edition sold half a million copies during its first week,
prompting publisher Anchor Books to bump its initial printing from 5 million to
6 million.
Controversy is familiar territory for Brown, who even received harsh words
from the Vatican for a plot line that suggests Jesus and Mary Magdalene married
and had a child whose bloodline survives to this day.
This month, a British court rejected a copyright infringement case brought
against his publisher that claimed that "The Da Vinci Code" stole from an
earlier, nonfiction work, "Holy Blood, Holy Grail." For Brown, the issue has
become fodder for jokes.
"By the way if anybody in the audience would like to sue me, we have forms
out back," Brown said. "Just pick one up on your way out."
The talk, presented by New Hampshire Public Radio and The Music Hall of
Portsmouth, was billed as his only public appearance before next month's release
of the movie version of "The Da Vinci Code," starring Tom Hanks. Brown an
executive producer.
Fans may have to wait a while for the sequel to "The Da Vinci Code," which
again features Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon as protagonist.
"I'm in no hurry," Brown said. "I just have to write a great follow up and
it'll be done when it's done."