I didn’t expect it to be hard to put this book down! It was gripping, and the author tied it all back to a message about what Leonardo DaVinci would have thought about all the drama. The investigators of the Mona Lisa theft could have learned from his open mind and habit of trying to see the world as it was, not through a lens of assumptions and people’s previous ideas.
And the crowds of people who go to see the Mona Lisa could learn from his constant search for new things to discover. Instead of taking a picture with a picture we’ve seen hundreds of times before, what might be be able to discover if we just looked closer, or looked around?
The author’s curiosity and dedication to researching in order to find more fascinating and unexpected details reminds me of Leonardo. It makes me excited to discover more of the crazy stories in history.
Overall, for me, the book was about observing and being hungry for knowledge, knowing that your mind will want to believe the better story and looking closer to find the facts anyway. The real story often turns out to be better in the end, even though the other options presented seemed more romantic, dramatic or exciting at first.