United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. Ireland (Press Release) February 9, 2008 --
Dan Brown’s next pulp fiction thriller will disappoint the fans and be nothing like they are expecting.
News reports published in The Times Newspaper and on Internet websites, all claim that Dan Brown’s next thriller will be nothing like the fans have been expecting.
According to the president of Bertelsmann's Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group, whose Doubleday imprint publishes Mr. Brown he has hinted that a manuscript is close saying. "Dan Brown has a very specific release date for the publication of his new book, and when the book is published, his readers will see why," Rubin seems to be hinting at a specific reason behind the publication date. Tony Mills writing for The Times believes that for an encore, following the huge success of the Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown is serving up another literary mystery, though not the one his fans had hoped for. Mills asks the question what has happened to his next book saying that its almost five years since his last novel.
Word of a sequel began to emerge in 2004, when Brown’s US publisher hinted that a new book would appear the following year. Brown has since revealed that he is working on a story about the influence of freemasonry in Washington DC in the mid-19th century whilst other rumours claim he has been meeting leaders of the Mormon community in Salt Lake City.
A different story called ‘The Treaty is no less compelling and written by the author David J Grant. The Treaty only recently published in October 2007 is a classic pulp fiction thriller about the USA and London drugs scene, pushing the boundaries of conspiracy theories involving members of the British Royal Family and an ex-American President. No reaction has been given by Buckingham Palace and the publishers Samosir Books Ltd claim they are ready to defend this historically based story. While admitting all the way through it is a work of fiction as time passes so many of the twists and turns in the plot seem more likely to be true.
Dan Brown is saying nothing about his new book and all reference to it has disappeared off the web site.
John Sutherland, emeritus professor of modern English literature at University College London and a Sunday Times said there are many examples of authors who never go on to write another book after a big success. He cited Margaret Mitchell, who never published again after writing Gone with the Wind, and JD Salinger, who followed Catcher in the Rye with a few short stories and nothing else after 1965. Thomas Harris, author of the Hannibal Lecter crime novels, needed 11 years to produce a sequel to Silence of the Lambs. Having huge success as an author Thomas Hardy wrote his last novel Jude the Obscure in 1895 despite living for another 33 years.
The Treaty is described as a fast paced thriller embellishing a plot by a mysterious group of influential statesmen and women who have been manipulating the world economy for over three decades.
News reports published in The Times Newspaper and on Internet websites, all claim that Dan Brown’s next thriller will be nothing like the fans have been expecting.
According to the president of Bertelsmann's Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group, whose Doubleday imprint publishes Mr. Brown he has hinted that a manuscript is close saying. "Dan Brown has a very specific release date for the publication of his new book, and when the book is published, his readers will see why," Rubin seems to be hinting at a specific reason behind the publication date. Tony Mills writing for The Times believes that for an encore, following the huge success of the Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown is serving up another literary mystery, though not the one his fans had hoped for. Mills asks the question what has happened to his next book saying that its almost five years since his last novel.
Word of a sequel began to emerge in 2004, when Brown’s US publisher hinted that a new book would appear the following year. Brown has since revealed that he is working on a story about the influence of freemasonry in Washington DC in the mid-19th century whilst other rumours claim he has been meeting leaders of the Mormon community in Salt Lake City.
A different story called ‘The Treaty is no less compelling and written by the author David J Grant. The Treaty only recently published in October 2007 is a classic pulp fiction thriller about the USA and London drugs scene, pushing the boundaries of conspiracy theories involving members of the British Royal Family and an ex-American President. No reaction has been given by Buckingham Palace and the publishers Samosir Books Ltd claim they are ready to defend this historically based story. While admitting all the way through it is a work of fiction as time passes so many of the twists and turns in the plot seem more likely to be true.
Dan Brown is saying nothing about his new book and all reference to it has disappeared off the web site.
John Sutherland, emeritus professor of modern English literature at University College London and a Sunday Times said there are many examples of authors who never go on to write another book after a big success. He cited Margaret Mitchell, who never published again after writing Gone with the Wind, and JD Salinger, who followed Catcher in the Rye with a few short stories and nothing else after 1965. Thomas Harris, author of the Hannibal Lecter crime novels, needed 11 years to produce a sequel to Silence of the Lambs. Having huge success as an author Thomas Hardy wrote his last novel Jude the Obscure in 1895 despite living for another 33 years.
The Treaty is described as a fast paced thriller embellishing a plot by a mysterious group of influential statesmen and women who have been manipulating the world economy for over three decades.

News reports published in The Times Newspaper and on Internet websites, all claim that Dan Brown’s next thriller will be nothing like the fans have been expecting.

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