<p>So guys... Secret Societies. Do they exist at all at Princeton, or is that a no with all the Eating Club selectiveness. Just curious... - Beers</p>
<p>i dunno about secret societies. the ivy club sounds secret tho with their selection process. btw, did you read the rule of four?</p>
<p>no i didnt! what's that all about?</p>
<p>its about a medieval text which these two students that attend Princeton are working on. its really good, has a lot of campus secrets and stuff. kinda made me want to go there more.</p>
<p>i will definitely look that up then... thanks a bunch!</p>
<p>Yeah, I'm planning on buying RO4 next week. It revolves heavily around Princeton and it's a bestseller at that. Suh-weet!</p>
<p>Ro4 is really really good. philntex, have you been accepted to p-ton?</p>
<p>That I have :)</p>
<p>ugh Dan Brown... one of those authors who we will look back at in 10 years and think, 'wtf were we thinking?"</p>
<p>Jk, i read both his Da Vinci Code (fun, but relied too heavily on half truths and often, outright lies) and the Rule of Four. they were fun, but don't take what he says seriously... there's a reason why it's fiction...</p>
<p>I'll have to pick up Rule of Four.</p>
<p>Dan Brown didn't write Rule of Four, if that's what you're implying</p>
<p>I just finished the Rule of Four--loved the Princeton social life descriptions.</p>
<p>yeah RO4 was sweet on the campus descs! and it wasn't written by dan brown...</p>
<p>Ro4 is very much like a Dan Brown novel in that it is a very fast read and is very good. I loved the story and did become more interested in Princeton after reading it. There's a lot about the eating clubs.</p>
<p>I find Dan Brown's prose to be dull and repetitive. DV Code was alright...the ideas made up for the terrible writing style. I haven't read RO4, but my dad told me that it was terrible.</p>