Tuesday, August 24, 2010

The Lost Squirrel...

I've been listening to The Lost Symbol as an audiobook and in the library CD package I found this unknown Dan Brown work that I thought I should share with everyone...

The Lost Squirrel

Robert Langdon woke from a dreamless sleep in his Cambridge apartment near Harvard University, America’s oldest and finest college of higher learning. Sleep, he knew, was a habit shared by all mammals and most invertebrates. No one understood why sleep was so necessary for these life forms but Robert Langdon knew that dolphins only slept with half their brain at any one time, otherwise they would drown. Dreams were another of the many domains of Robert Langdon's expertise. Freud, of course, was not the first to interpret dreams; famously Joseph of the Israelites, exiled in the land of Egypt, had become an expert dream reader for the pharaohs.

Robert Langdon got out of bed and walked across the carpet. Carpets had been covering the homes of human beings since weaving was discovered by the Sumerians in the second millennium BC. His carpet had not however come from Sumeria, but rather from the Ikea on I-95. It was 5.55 in the morning the same time philosopher Immanuel Kant woke each day for his constitutional walk around the city of Konigsberg. Kant was so regular that shopkeepers could set their watches by him. Now of course Konigsberg had been renamed Kaliningrad and was no longer in East Prussia but rather in the odd Russian exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast. Chuckling Robert Langdon wondered if the Knights of the Teutonic order would have been happy with that state of affairs.

“Oh tempora, oh mores,” he said in Latin, once the universal language spoken by all cultured peoples but now a mere tool for academics and the esoteric tongue of the Vatican.

In the kitchen the Harvard University wall calendar told him that it was Tuesday. Tuesday, he thought, remembering that it was named for the Norse god Tiu, the equivalent of the Roman god Mars. Tuesday was the second day of the week, coming between Monday and Wednesday. Tuesday and Thursday were the only days of the week that began with a T, although Thursday's T was a soft one, not a hard one.

Robert Langdon opened his Northland 3000 refrigerator, the most expensive fridge in the world, a gift from his mentor the brilliant Professor of quantum mechanics John Elton who was also an international singing star and who used a cunningly inverted stage name and red wig to hide himself. Robert Langdon took out a pint of milk. Milk he knew came from the lactation glands of cows. All female mammals lactated. He wondered if duck billed platypuses did so. Hmm, he thought, if only there was some device that could give him that information easily. Some kind of encyclopedia - perhaps stored electronically. If such a device existed you wouldn’t need everything explained all the time, because you could assume that people weren’t idiots and they could just look stuff up they didn't know.

He poured the milk into his bowl of cornflakes. Cornflakes of course had been developed by William Keith Kellogg as a health food, but now were consumed across the world by all cultures. He ate quickly. The Harvard University pool where he swam each morning opened at 6:30 and that only gave him fifteen minutes to get dressed in his trousers and polo neck. Trousers of course had been popularized by Beau Brummel following the sans culottes revolution in F-

The phone rang. “Is this Bob Langdon?” a guttural voice asked. A voice that seemed to be speaking from another dimension entirely, maybe even another universe. Modern physics had proven that many universes existed - the multiverse it was called - but telephone conversations between the universes had never been thought possible. Perhaps until today!

“This is Semiotics Professor Robert Langdon of Harvard University, America’s oldest and finest institution of higher learning.”

“I’m a Boise State man myself, listen Bob, we live just across the street and your car alarm has been going off for the last fifteen minutes, can you come out and turn it off, please.”

Robert Langdon knew that alarms had existed since Roman times when the sacred geese on the Capitol hill had alerted the sleeping citizens that an attack by the Celts was imminent.

"Can you go outside, please, pal. We want to get back to sleep.”

"Did you know that dolphins only sleep with half their br..." Robert Langdon began but the phone was dead. It reminded him that the first phone call had been made in this very city by Alexander Graham Bell who had unfortunately not taught at Harvard but rather at the inferior Boston University.

Professor Robert Langdon dressed and went outside. The alarm on his Porsche Boxster S was indeed sounding. Porsche was a German company founded in 1931 by Ferdinand Porsche, but that was not important right now, what was important was the alarm.

He turned it off with a push on his infrared key button. Robert Langdon was worried. What could possibly have set off this alarm in the first place? He examined the car’s roof. It was covered with squirrel poop. Squirrels were a type of rodent common in North America and Europe. The squirrel was in the tree, naked and afraid. Could it have jumped on the roof and started the alarm, shat itself and jumped off. No. That didn't seem likely at all. What struck Robert Langdon about the poop was the fact that if you cocked your head and looked at it in a funny way it seemed to be arranged in an aleph, first letter of the Hebrew alphabet and key to the ancient wisdom of the Zohar. A chill coursed through him.

“I have a terrible feeling,” he said out loud to no one in particular “that I am about to be thrust into another one of my strange adventures.”

The wind blew from the north, which in this hemisphere was where the polar regions lay. He turned up the collar on his coat and headed towards the Georgian buildings of Harvard University, America’s oldest and finest institution of higher learning.

63 comments:

Cameron Ashley said...

Vintage Brown!

adrian mckinty said...

Cam

Yeah it must be the start of his new bestseller, quite a coup for my blog to find it.

Declan Burke said...

Apparently dolphins can read Dan Brown while they're asleep, using the sleeping side of their brain. It says it right there in the Upanishads.

Cheers, Dec

adrian mckinty said...

Dec

Apparenty all modern wisdom was first explained by the ancients. Not bad for a bunch of people who thought the Earth was flat.

Brian O'Rourke said...

This is effing hysterical.

Josh from Ohio said...

Adrian,

This is damn funny, but I detect some penis envy.

The Da Vinci Code wasn't a bad read. Granted, it wasn't DIWMB, but not bad.

Josh

Matt said...

This is the first time I've been able to get through more than a paragraph of Brown's work. Congratulations, Adrian!

But penis envy, dude? Seriously?

And I don't doubt anyone alive short of Bill gates would jealous of Brown's bank account, but talent? To paraphrase Andrew Vachss, do you think Muddy Waters envies Vanilla Ice because To the Extreme outsold Hard Again twenty to one?

Dana King said...

People at my job are looking at me, wondering why I have tears in my eyes. I told them my grandmother died. That seems to satisfy them.

THE DAVINCI CODE lost me on the first page. If the curator of the Louvre, the world's most famous art museum, had the reserves of strength and presence of mind to arrange himself in such a manner while dying from an evisceration, why didn't he just drag his ass back to his office and make a phone call? Or maybe spell out a clue--the killer's name comes to mind--in his own blood?

I finished it--I'm OCD that way--but fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice...

Anonymous said...

It's a page turner ..... can't wait for the next chapter.

HoldenCaufield said...

Dan Brown is one of the most overrated writers alive today. I’m OCD, like Dana, and finished The Da Vinci Code (scratching and clawing for the end) and then went on to read Angels and Demons (fooled me twice, shame on me), and even saw both movies because I’m basically a masochist.

I suffer the equivalent of road rage (book rage?) over Dan Brown’s plot holes and convoluted premises.

This lost squirrel piece is a joke, right? The bit about Langdon cocking his head a certain way and seeing squirrel shit “arranged in an aleph, first letter of the Hebrew alphabet and key to ancient wisdom of Zohar” is funnier than funny. But please tell me this is a joke or my head will explode because it's almost entirely believable that Dan Brown would write this type of doo doo.

Uriah Robinson said...

Wonderful, wonderful. Pity so many other writers are producing books in that inimitable style.

John McFetridge said...

So, let me get this straight, Harvard is an old school? And people think it's pretty good?

At the bar at Bouchercon I was with a group of people and a woman told us that she'd gone to Stanford. No one said anythng, so she explained that, "Stanford is the Harvard of the west coast."

Still nothing, until Jim Born said, "Really? I went Florida State - it's the Harvard of Leon County."

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

Thanks man, although you'd blow your brains out if you had to write a whole book of stuff like that.

adrian mckinty said...

Josh

I listened to Da Vinci as an audio. I didnt mind it too much, although I was pissed off when the narrator gave the myserious caller/agent provacateur and Sir Lee Teabing (or Sir Teabing as he was often called) two completely different voices.

Also Prince Charles and Lady Di got married in St Pauls not Westminister Abbey.

And yeah I'd be more than happy with one percent of his sales.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

Glad you liked it. I'm just glad that Muddy Waters finally got some cash before he died.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

Why would he write a name in blood or use his cell phone when he could strip naked, position his body awkwardly and leave a complex series of clues all over the Louvre - its the obvious thing to do.

adrian mckinty said...

Anonymous

Unfortunately that was all that was there, alas.

adrian mckinty said...

Holden

It's a harmless parody. I'm only kidding. But I kid because I love. Or something like that.

I was inspired when D B felt the need to tell me the entire history of tattooing in the first few pages of his new book, because nobody had ever heard of such an exotic thing before.

adrian mckinty said...

Uriah

Well thats what the people want, clearly.

adrian mckinty said...

John

Thats a great story. DB also went to Phillips Exeter, America's oldest and finest private school, home to such alumns as Gore Vidal, James Agee and the kid who plays Dewey in Malcolm in the Middle.

Ian said...

OMG good job, this is so effing off the hook. This is a MILD exaggeration of the way Dan Brown writes. I just finished The Lost Symbol and it really is like that.

Niiiice work.

Dont expect any phone calls from Ron Howard's agent any time soon though.

Josh from Ohio said...

Matt, Dude! It was a joke. Sorry that one slipped by you. I'm fairly certain we would all like a piece of Brown's cash pie.

And who's Muddy Waters? Wait, before you respond, that's also a joke.

Josh

Anonymous said...

Its not that Dan Brown's an idiot, he went to Harvard, America's fineset and oldest etc. and a 100 million dollars in the bank prove that, its the fact that he thinks his readers are idiots that gets on my nerves

seana said...

Shoot. I was just settling in, expecting to finally learn why Harvard has Georgian pillars, and maybe eventually learn the whole Hebrew alphabet, and find out why squirrels seem to know it so instinctively, and above all what was scaring that poor defenseless arborial creature. ("Arborial" means having to do with trees,by the way, and nothing to do with Cockney harbors.) But then it just...stopped.

It's quite obvious that Dan Brown should not be allowed to write short stories but only long tomes so that he can fit in all his vast erudition. Otherwise people will feel they are missing out.

Who read the part of the squirrel, by the way, because that could so easily go badly wrong.

adrian mckinty said...

Ian

I have to say though, the audiobook isnt bad at all. I love those audiobooks where the narrator really performs all the voices.

adrian mckinty said...

Josh

Oh I'll take even a small part of his cash. Or even Tom Hanks's cash.

adrian mckinty said...

Anon

I'm feeling a bit defensive about DB. The thing is we all have tendencies in our writing were we can go badly off the rails thats where editors come in and make us get back on track. Brown really needs a slightly tougher editor if he isnt to drive us all mad. Of course what the hell do I know? He's the one selling in the MILLIONS.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I felt the squirrel character was under utilised. Which type of North American squirrel was he? What colour? Why were we not informed that squirrel meat is commonly eaten in Appalachia but seldom in Massachusetts. Could we not also have been told that squirrel meat can give people Creutzfeld-Jacob disease? Maybe the red squirrel protection plans in the UK could also have been mentioned, as well as a look at squirrel intelligence.

seana said...

Yes, all these questions would no doubt have been answered in the full length novel, but alas, it is not to be.

I don't know if Dan needs any help in the story expanding department--okay, I know he doesn't--but I've actually got new squirrely tales right here in Santa Cruz. The squirrels are pretty active in the back yard, but I didn't know how active till my landlady mentioned to me that this rogue one had run up her leg when she was out watering. When I asked her a few days later if any more incidents had arisen, she said that it really dislikes her cat, and that one morning, it had actually dropped out of a tree to land right by the cat and scare the living bejeezus out of it. Ths is no small cat either.

I didn't know at the time that I was supposed to ask whether it had left a cryptic message in droppings, though. But I can already guess that it probably spelled out, "Get rid of this insufferable cat." Though 'insufferable' (which means 'not possible to suffer', and has nothing to do with squirrel suffrage, surprisingly enough) is probably beyond a squirrel's vocabulary. I know that may sound prejudiced against squirrels, but there it is.

Anonymous said...

Just noticed that you spell out "Robert Langdon" every time. He doesn't do that all the way through does he?

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Squirrels really are clever. Almost as smart as crows and you know how I feel about crows.

Here's a nice little BBC clip.

adrian mckinty said...

Anon

No not really, but it just seemed right here didnt it? There may have been a little exaggeration for effect.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I just found an ever better featuring that rodent genius - the gray squirrel

seana said...

Well, due to the fact that my computer needs a lot of help, I am actally working off an alien hard drive that my computer savvy friend graciously lent me for the near term. Unfortunately, it doesn't have a lot of extras. But I will watch those videos when I can. I love squirrels, even though I had one run up my leg in a vitamin store once. I suppose you can guess what I got warned off of. Vitamins stores.

Also my backyard for the time being. But it looks pretty lovely through the double-paned windows. And I stress double-paned, in case any squirrels are reading along here. I wouldn't put it past them.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Bullshit. Dan Brown should be able to write sentences that good.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Muddy Waters also received a tribute in the pseudonymn of a Dagger-nominated translator, out there for all to see, unconcealed by elaborate codes.
=================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Get thee to a Java enabled machine.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Thread jumping: Havent read Ellory or Christa Faust. Faust sounds like my cup of tea I think.

DB, whatever his flaws, my God he finds the zeigeist choo choo and seems to jump on it and thats got to be worth something.

(100 million someone said)

seana said...

It's actually kind of cool, though occasionally frustrating. My friend gave me a disc that is basically a complete operating system on it's own, So it doesn't interact with my own desktop at all. It's kind of like my computer now has a split personality, or a temporary removable brain, which I figure is in the cards for humans too at some point down the line.

But I do want to see those squirrels.

Peter Rozovsky said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Peter Rozovsky said...

I wouldn't mind having mine removed, but I'd like to know what the chances are of getting a temporary replacement and whether repair work on the original is guaranteed. I'd insist on a 30-day warranty and not a day less.
=================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Michael Stone said...

Ha, I loved this post. It's funny because it's true (as Homer Simpson likes to say).

marco said...

or a temporary removable brain, which I figure is in the cards for humans too at some point down the line.

But I do want to see those squirrels.


It has already been done a couple of years ago with badgers, and by now probably newer models have been installed on squirrels.
Installing Linux on a Dead Badger

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the DB excerpt. Devious blighters Squirrels with their cutesy guise. One stole a Rolo from me in Hyde Park. The breed is damned.

adrian mckinty said...

Mike

Well its not that true.

If I could keep it up I'd be ghosting for a living.

adrian mckinty said...

Marco

A definite Ballardian air there.

adrian mckinty said...

Anon

A squirrel broke into my rooms at uni and wrecked the place not once but twice. They are very devious.

Hardbarned said...

this is hilarious. i see a second career for you, writing a series of books of parody based on popular authors/genres. seriously. i'd buy them.

once when i was visiting the cloisters in NYC, i was feeding peanuts to a squirrel and the little rodent sliced my finger open with one of his sharp talons or claws or whatnot. he didn't mean it though.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Stay away from medieval art, man. And how do you know the squirrel didn't mean it? What are, you? St. Francis? Dr. Doolittle?
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

seana said...

Oh, they never 'mean' it. It's always just some sort of squirrely 'accident'.

adrian mckinty said...

HB

The best thing would be if someone paid me to do a parody McKinty.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

You forget to mention mad bombers - wasn't there some kind of mad bomber at the Cloisters in that Clint Eastwood movie Coogan's Bluff?

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

If only Hitchcock hadnt made the birds we could have collaborated on a screenplay.

seana said...

I still think there's room for a scary squirrel movie, and I think we could make a pretty good one, but I'm afraid that the people who would be most freaked out by it would be ourselves.

Also, I don't want to offend the squirrel gods.

rob.james said...

Have you seen this? Nora Ephron does Steig Larsson

http://www.newyorker.com/humor/2010/07/05/100705sh_shouts_ephron

adrian said...

Rob

I dont think she quite pulls it off. She kind of peters off towards the end when thats when the piece should have been getting stronger. If she'd read the second Stieg Larsson book she could have mentioned the absurd fact that the heroine gets breasts implants. I dont think her heart was really in it.

I remember when people used to read The New Yorker because it was funny. These days its more nostalgic than funny: Woody Allen, Nora Ephron, David Sedaris - these were the once the heavyweight champs now sadly brought low by the years.

The Onion is funnier, their AV Club is more relevant and, crucially, its free.

dpougher said...

I'm not sure that was Dan Brown - I mean, nobody smiled wolfishly. Somewhere, at some time, in all Brown books someone smiles wolfishly.

adrian said...

David

Yes I read that he was contractually obliged to have half a dozen smiling wolfishlies per book. And you just cant have a torso it has to be a muscled torso.

seana said...

Rob, I liked it too, but I do understand the New Yorker insider anti-sentiment.

I know any dissing of the New Yorker or the New York creative elite will come across merely as envy, but really? I've read a few NYC novels in recent months, and I have to say ho hum. How provincial.

I am, however, reading a galley of Jonathan Franzen's Freedom. I am really enjoying it, but I am also pretty pissed off about all the hype around it. First of all they decided to make the galleys a scarce commodity, which meant that I had to beg a number of sources simply to review it for our newsletter. Second, even if it turns out to be his masterpiece, why all the attention to this book and scant help to so many other worthy contenders? I was saying to friends at work today that I really hope that all the marketing hype doesn't make me hate this novel, because that's not fair either. It's not coming from Franzen, who's a very decent sort of guy. It's coming from the publishing machine.

rob.james said...

I have problems with Franzen.
I loved The Corrections but also hated everything about it.
It became my favourite and least favourite book of the year.

adrian said...

Seana

Yes I know its an old trope: the New Yorker is ALWAYS in decline from a once great mythical past, but I do think they need to do something about their humor. Throwing David Sedaris at us once a month just wont do. And I still think Malcolm Gladwell is a complete charlatan.

adrian said...

Rob

I felt EXACTLY the same way. I loved the jokes and the way the story fitted together but I got annoyed very often too. The whole Eastern Europe sojourn...yikes. And the soft core lesbo stuff...another yikes. Still, yes, my favourite book of that year.

But again, I feel that the novel is probably in decline. The last really great novels I've read were A Suitable Boy and Midnight's Children, both of which - coincidentally - were set in India, but both crucially were written quite some time ago.

seana said...

I actually don't think Franzen would mind that assessment. And I think the new one may strike you both the same way. I do think his writing is both very fluid and very funny. I'm not talking about the jokes, I'm talking about the way he sees the world.

I think the novel has always been in decline in a similar way to that New Yorker trope, but personally I still like reading them.

I like Satanic Verses better.