Dan Brown is one of the most acknowledged thriller fiction writers of the age, his book ‘The Da Vinci Code’ being one of the bestsellers
@Amherst College, Birthday and Childhood
Dan Brown is one of the most acknowledged thriller fiction writers of the age, his book ‘The Da Vinci Code’ being one of the bestsellers
Dan Brown born at
Brown’s relocation to Los Angeles in the year 1991 paid handsome results personally; as it was there that he met his lady love Blythe Newlon. Despite working in the position of Director of Artist Development for the National Academy of Songwriters, Newlon was instantly attracted to Brown who was 12 years his junior.
Blythe started helping Brown to promote his career using the power of her position. In 1993, when Brown moved back to New Hampshire, Newlon tagged along with him, thus proclaiming their love to the world for the first time.
The two tied the knot in 1997 at Pea Porridge Pond, near Conway, New Hampshire. Over the years, Newlon has been the pillar of strength and the backbone for Brown. She has assisted him in numerous projects, helping him in the research and like.
Dan Brown was born in Exeter, New Hampshire to Richard G. Brown, a mathematics teacher, and Connie Brown, a music professor. He was the eldest of the three children and was raised as an Episcopalian.
Since young, Brown was comfortable dealing with multiple disciplines, which the world assumed to be poles apart from each other. Growing up in a household where science and religion coexisted peacefully, Brown got the taste of best of both the worlds. While the foundation of science rested on proofs, claims, equations and codes, religion relied on faith alone.
Educationally, Brown completed his formal education from Philips Exeter Academy after which he enrolled himself at the Amherst College. At the college, Brown was an active student. He was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity and was also a writing student of visiting novelist Alan Lelchuk. He sang at the Amherst Glee Club and also played squash.
In 1985, Brown went to Seville Spain, to do an art history course from the University of Seville.
He completed his graduation from Amherst College, Massachusetts in 1986.
Moving out from college, Brown took up music as his career option. He started creating effects with a synthesizer and also released a children’s cassette entitled SynthAnimals. The record included tracks like ‘Happy frogs’ and ‘Suzuki Elephants’. The cassette acclaimed decent success, selling about a few hundred copies.
The success of SynthAnimals lead Brown to form his own record company called Dalliance. In 1990, he came up with his self-published CD, ‘Perspective’. Unlike his previous release, his second album targeted the youth. It too sold a few hundred copies.
In 1991, Brown relocated to Hollywood to pursue a career as a singer-songwriter and pianist. However, since his musical career was not shaping up the way he assumed it would, for a steady income and some financial help, he took to teaching Spanish at the Beverly Hills Preparatory School.
Brown joined the National Academy of Songwriters and participated in many of its events. He gained much help from Blythe Newlon, who went out of the way in order to help him by promoting his projects, writing press releases, setting up promotional events, and putting him in contact with the who’s who in the industry.
In 1993, he released the CD Dan Brown, which included songs such as ‘976-Love’ and ‘If You Believe in Love’. Same year, Brown returned to New Hampshire. To support himself, he took up the profession of teaching. He taught English to students at his alma mater Philips Exeter Academy, and Spanish to 6th, 7th, and 8th graders at Lincoln Akerman School.
A chance reading of the novel ‘The Doomsday Conspiracy’ by Sidney Sheldon changed the course of Dan Brown’s life completely. Inspired by the simplicity of the prose and the efficiency with which the storyline was dealt with, Brown resorted to switching to a writing career.
To pursue writing professionally, Brown started working on ‘Digital Fortress’, his first thrilled-based novel. He centred it at Seville, a place where he had spent a year in 1985. He quit teaching in 1996. Two years henceforth, in 1998 ‘Digital Fortress’ was released.
Meanwhile, Brown came up with two humor books as well, ‘187 Men to Avoid: A Guide for the Romantically Frustrated Woman’ and ‘The Bald Book’. While the former was published under the pseudonym ‘Danielle Brown’, the latter was officially credited to his wife.
Following years, i.e. in 2000 and 2001, Brown released his next two books, ‘Angels & Demons’ and ‘Deception Point’. It was in Angels & Demons that Brown first introduced the lead character of Robert Langdon, a Harvard symbology expert. Both his books did medium business, selling lesser than 10, 000 copies each.
It was Brown’s fourth novel that unleashed the success story of the author to never-experienced-before heights. ‘The Da Vinci Code’ not only outdid its predecessors, but went on to feature at the topmost position in the New York Times Best Seller list during its first week of release in 2003. It sold 81 million copies worldwide as of 2009.