
Los Caballeros de Salomon
The Knights Templar, a small monastic military order formed in the early 1100s to protect travelers to the Holy Land, eventually grew and became wealthy beyond imagination. In 1307, the French king, feeling jealous and greedy, killed off the Templars, and by 1311, the last master, Jacques de Molay, was burned at the stake. The whereabouts of the Templars' treasure--and their secrets--have been the subject of legend ever since. Now, a new thriller trieas to follow in the steps of The Da Vinci Code. There's a secret about early Christianity at the core of Berry's Templar Legacy, but he dispenses the clues too slowly. The cat-and-mouse game between Cotton Malone, a former Justice Department agent, and a modern-day order of Knights Templar is weighed down with too much confusing backstory about the Templars' connection to Rennes-le-Chateau and the mystery that surrounds it. (The real-life town plays a part in The Da Vinci Code as well.) Like Dan Brown, Berry draws on the seminal nonfiction work Holy Blood, Holy Grail for many of his themes. After nearly grinding to a halt through all the premise building, the novel finally gathers steam in the last 100 pages or so, concluding with a revelation that seems refreshingly clear after the many convoluted twists that precede it. Until the next Dan Brown opus is released, this should hold devotees Una orden medieval. Una conspiraci?n moderna. Un enigma extraordinario. La poderosa orden medieval de los templarios pose?a un conocimiento secreto que amenazaba los cimientos de la Iglesia y cuya revelaci?n podr?a haber cambiado el rumbo de la Historia. Condenador por herej?a, fueron aniquilados en el siglo XIV, y los rastros de su colosal saber seperdieron en el abismo de la Historia. Hasta hoy. Cotton Malone, un ex agente secreto del gobierno americano, se ve envuelto en una persecuci?n a contrarreloj por descifrar ese enigma que los templarios codificaron. Su b?squeda pone al descubierto una peligrosa conspiraci?n religiosa capaz de cambiar el destino de la humanidad y poner en entredicho la veracidad de los Santos Evangelios.