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All-Time High Scores
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed books.
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The Rule Of Four |
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A mysterious coded manuscript, a violent Ivy League murder, and the secrets of a Renaissance prince collide in a labyrinth of betrayal, madness, and genius. [Dial Press]
Dial Press, 384 pages
05/11/2004
$24.00
ISBN: 0385337116
Fiction
General Literature & Fiction
All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...
The average user rating for this book is 5.0 (out of 10) based on 12 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Nancy T gave it a5:
My daughter gave me this book a couple monts ago. Every time I picked it up, I put it back down, thinking it had no vaule for me, a 70 year old woman. But, alas, I did finally get into it. All the while wonder why I was reading it. Skipping a lot of the translation gunk, I did find a couple things that have stayed in my mind. " Leonardo wrote that a painter should begin every canvas with a wash of black, because all thing in nature are dark except where exposed by the light." and, "My father taught me something else.......: never invest yourself in anything so deeply that its failure could cost you your happiness." this is more than I get out of must books.
Neil L gave it a2:
The first half has been painfully dull and I doubt I'll bother with the second. The authors seem more intent on drowning this semi-autobiography with intellectual snobbery than actually developing a sense of intrigue or ultimately delivering a satisfying read. This book has been hailed as a "Da Vinci Code with brains." And yet, the smartest thing about this novel, as far as I can see, is the authors' decision to catch a ride on the Dam Brown's coat tails.
Simon K gave it a0:
Whichever Fleet Street hack supplied the cover quotation, referring to this turgid, clichéd, and self indulgent shelf-filler as "The Da Vinci Code for people with brains" ought to be sealed in a Florentine vault with only a copy of the "Rule of Four" for company. Forever. Low-calorie airport novel that it is, I genuinely wanted to know how "The Da Vinci Code" would end. With "The Rule of Four", I merely found myself asking "when", and later "if". To go into great detail on the subject of its inadequacies would be a joyless waste of time when I've already wasted enough actually reading it. Suffice it to say that any possibility of the dramatic tension, page-turning suspense or intellectual stimulation that the sleeve promises is destroyed by preposterous dialogue, the author's childlike attempts at character development, and page after page of pointless Princeton related trivia all related in a tone of cloying, smug nostalgia. As another reviewer has already pointed out - the only sane people who could possibly enjoy this novel are those who have been to Princeton. I didn't go to Princeton, but were that the case, I can scarcely credit that the spectacle of a group of unengaging, two dimensional, witless chimps waving manuscipts and clapping each others' backs in various Ivy League locations would qualify as my idea of entertainment. Avoid at all costs.
Cathy B gave it a7:
I liked the Princeton setting, the scholarship, even the mystery of the book in the past and the murder mystery of the present. What I didn't buy was the idea that the main character couldn't both work on the book with his roommate and have a life, girlfriend, etc. That seemed contrived, an unneccessary artifice to make a point that didn't need to be made. Otherwise, beautifully written, a good book.
Jonas A gave it an8:
Perhaps it is because I went to college at a university (not ivy league) where there were real steam tunnels, but I enjoyed this book very much. The characters are not shallow cartoon people, and the choices they face at their university reflect the same choices everyone is faced with in life when they are in that frightening state between adolescence and adulthood. In fact, the four roommates who are the main characters are remarkably sincere, thoughtful, and hardworking folks. I did think there were circumstances described in the plot where most students would have taken their stories to the campus police rather than considered the police as adversaries. But I can't fathom that someone might consider this book dull or boring.
Joe S gave it a9:
One of the best books i have read in a while. read it in 2 days. different than The Davinci code, but definitly on par with it. I enjoyed the discriptive writing and the in-depth character development.
Jeff B gave it a3:
The basic historical mystery of this novel is intriguing; however, the reader is forced to endure countless chapters of non-essential and non-interesting character development. The authors seemed to have a large word quota to meet. The pace is far, far from Dan Brown's.

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