Monday 13 March 2017

DAN BROWN'S VERSATILITY IN DIGITAL FORTRESS: A BRILLIANT REVIEW BY UBAJI ISIAKA ABUBAKAR EAZY

Dan Brown is a writer I have come to respect and love so much among American thriller writers. His novels are just too fascinating to be kept aside once you begin turning the pages. You would have to agree with me that the guy is a smart and intelligent writer, you come out of every of his stories feeling a lot wiser and knowledgeable than you were before encountering them; and that is one thing I love about the man, he gives the thrills yet educates his readers.

The first time I met him, he took me to a museum in Paris (The Da Vinci Code), then we met again and it was a journey to Rome (Angels and Demons) and here I am again just returned from Spain where we went seeking a code designed by Ensei Takando (Digital Fortress). Yes with Brown, it is always about a secret code hidden somewhere which you have to get or else... And unfortunately, the only person who could easily provide this key or code died mysteriously. It is fascinating to see how Dan Brown goes into the world of the academia and makes a hero out of a professor (queer huh? Yeah that is how he rolls) and he succeeds in making his professors likeable characters. He picks them from the dull and monotonous world of the classroom and throws them in the midst of the whole action. His style is to get a university don involved in a mysterious murder and somehow he comes to discover that there is more to the death than meets the eye--there is a code or key to retrieve from somewhere and before you could say Micheal Jackson, the professor finds himself deeply engulfed in the whole imbroglio. Lets not forget also that Brown usually gets his professor attached to beautiful and extremely irresistible women too (winks).

So if the story telling style has little difference, where is the versatility I speak of? Let me explain. With Brown you always go back in time to discover what you might have probably missed while historical bricks were being laid. For instance, I can no more see Da Vinci's works and examine it with the same innocence and pleasurable disposition with which I have always attended to a work of art before now, I would always seek symbolic meanings in them and to think that the Catholic church and its friars might not all be saints leaves me in open mouthed wonder. So after reading The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons, I began thinking this man called Brown knows a lot of history and about work of art yet he was to surprise me by telling me that he knew more than just history. In Digital Fortress, Dan Brown crossed centuries and disciplines leaving the world of art and moving into that of technology, the world of computers. Dan Brown told me of a world I know too well in Digital Fortress, yet I was surprised at how little of that world I knew myself!

So, the NSA has built a machine named TRANSLTR to intercept internet messages (especially emails) and take a peek at them without the receiver knowing anything had gone wrong with their mails. Think of the US government invading everyone's privacy, running through your mails without permission and spying on you! Yes, that is just how bad it is. Ensei Takando, a Japanese computer guru crippled by tfhe effect of the Hiroshima cum Nagasaki atomic bomb radiation and software designer who works with the NSA felt it was wrong for a country to be so empowered. It means the US could spy on everybody but who is to spy on the United States of America? He went to the press with the news but no one believed him, he lost his job and reputation in the software development market for trying to blackmail the USA. His revenge is to build a virus which he manipulated the NSA's deputy director to sneak into TRANSLTR and destroy its data by lying that the virus is actually an unbreakable code he had written and named DIGITAL FORTRESS. To stop the virus from destroying the security walls and leave all of the United States classified documents vulnerable to hackers, all Ensei Takando wanted was for the NSA to come up with the truth that they had a machine used to spy on people's mail and he would give them the code to undo the damage done by the virus. But even if the NSA choose to tell the world the truth, it would still have been too late, Ensei Takando is himself late, he died mysteriously!

Professor David Becker, a language specialist and an academic celebrity has the task of locating Takando's corpse and retrieving the code. Simple job, so he thought and he was to be paid well for it too. But he would soon realise the job is everything except simple. His search for the code would lead him to many people and extremes including being tailed by a professional assassin (kinda remind me of the Nigerian movie known as Diamond Ring, that one with Teju Babyface, remember?). As the story develops, you would find out that it has amazing twists and turns so that you keep experiencing the unexpected and come to realise that people are not often what they pretend to be (Stratmore's obsession with Susan).

The novel has well developed characters and storyline; maybe the idea of having a deaf assassin does not appeal to me because at some point, the deaf assassin asked a question and got a reply which he heard, that was when he killed Eduardo's (Megan's boyfriend) friend after asking him which way David went and he was told David went towards the airport. Again, while pursuing David Becker at the church in Spain, David jumps back into the building and Hulohot (the assassin) felt his thud on the ground, now how is that possible for someone who is deaf? How a deaf man begins to hear suddenly and returns to being deaf amuses me, maybe he received some healing haha. That part where Susan suspected Hale of being NDakota and could not just blurt it out really got me washed out, why the hell must she wait that long to reveal what she knew to Strathmore at a private moment?

The novel does not rev up much complexities as the others where characters have to solve multiple word puzzles to reach their aim, the movement in Digital Fortress is smooth (although with too many coincidences for just one day--David's luck of being at the right spot at the right time--which leaves the story's verisimilitude in doubt). Here we are no longer dealing with art works or poetry, we are dealing with codes still but doing numbers--funny enough, still went down the classical era to learn of Julius Caesar's codification style.

In Achebe's parlance, he who wishes to see a mask dancing does not stand at a spot. Dan Brown has proven that his art is not all about building stories out of art relics and poetry, he has shown to us that he can also dabble into the modern world and come out unscathed, hence this techno thriller. This is why I mean by his been versatile.

Forsooth, my love for the novel is 'without wax'.

© Ubaji Isiaka Abubakar Eazy 2017