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Richard Leigh: 64, Writer Who Challenged "Da Vinci Code," Is Dead

Richard Leigh, a writer who filed an unsuccessful lawsuit over the novel “The Da Vinci Code,” died on Nov. 21 in London. He was 64.

The causes were related to a heart ailment, said an agent at the Jonathan Clowes Agency, which represents him.

Mr. Leigh was co-author of “The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail,” a work of speculative nonfiction that proposed that Jesus Christ fathered a child and that the bloodline continues to this day. A best seller on its release in 1982, the book gained new readers after Dan Brown’s “Da Vinci Code,” which explores similar themes, was released.

Mr. Leigh and another co-author, Michael Baigent, sued Mr. Brown’s publisher, Random House, saying that “The Da Vinci Code” “appropriated the architecture” of their book. A third “Holy Blood” co-author, Henry Lincoln, did not join the lawsuit.

In April 2006, Peter Smith, a High Court judge, threw out the claim, saying the ideas in question were too general to be protected by copyright.
Read entire article at APril D. DeConic in the NYT