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Loading... Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1) (original 2005; edition 2008)by Stephenie Meyer
Work InformationTwilight by Stephenie Meyer (2005)
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Did this book see an editor at all? Pretty much nothing happens until the last quarter of the book. It could've been half as long, and that's being generous. ( ) For me this book is just a teen romance with a vampire as main character. I like the way she describes the vampires, they are more beliveable than the classic ones, maybe even more than may dear Anne Rice's Vampires. But than it is just a teen love story from begining to end... Not a bad book but not nearly as good as I expected after all the hype it has... Strangely compelling, but this whole series contains strong anti-feminist content, no matter what the author says. Bella is a Mary Sue, and much of the writing comes across as Stephenie Meyer's consulting a thesaurus. MUST the Heathcliff-esque romantic hero have a "scintillating" arm? I get it, her vampires are sparkly. I read these books over the course of one weekend (they're easy) and felt dirty and sticky afterward, like I'd drunk a whole bottle of Boone's Farm and blacked out, only to find that, instead of doing something self-destructive, I'd just wasted a bunch of time with a bunch of romance novels, which I awkwardly sent packing and never saw again. This exchange from the comedy "Austin Powers" (yes, the movie), sums up the "Twilight" series (N.B.: IT'S NOT A "SAGA"!) for me: Dr. Evil: Scott, I want you to meet daddy's nemesis, Austin Powers Scott Evil: What? Are you feeding him? Why don't you just kill him? Dr. Evil: I have an even better idea. I'm going to place him in an easily escapable situation involving an overly elaborate and exotic death.
"Meyer's prose seldom rises above the serviceable, and the plotting is leaden" [....] "It's like reading a young teenage girl's blog" Astonishing, mainly for the ineptitude of her prose. Teen vampire schlock that has the nation’s youth in thrall. [L]et me say to you as a meat-eating, Entourage-watching, sports-loving (OK, I really don't love sports, or actually understand sports) — heterosexual man who can't sit through a single show on Lifetime television, let me loudly proclaim: I, Brad Meltzer, love the Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer. I confess, I have joined the legions of the bitten and smitten. The plot may sound rather comic and camp, but Meyer chooses to play it straight and serious. Vampires or not, what this novel is really about is a fatal attraction to someone or something dangerously different from yourself. The trajectory of the story is such that Bella's behavior and choices grow increasingly more disturbing, with irrevocable, self-destructive consequences. Is contained inHas the adaptationIs parodied inIs replied to inInspiredAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
When seventeen-year-old Bella leaves Phoenix to live with her father in Forks, Washington, she meets an exquisitely handsome boy at school for whom she feels an overwhelming attraction and who she comes to realize is not wholly human. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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