Agree with everything you said. I know what you mean about Bella vampire fan fiction that’s one of the reasons I don’t read fan fic. The truth is that I don’t understand a lot of people of Twilight fandom who prefer at dammed ending that a real beautiful one. Edward become human is the perfect ending and that’s the thing he wants. He want be human again all of the Cullen’s want mortality, they try their best to live their existence but if they don’t love humanity why are they so afraid of losing the bits of humanity they have left. The pro-bite constantly ignore the other side of the story. They ignore that the Cullen’s are a rarely exception in the vampirism word, they ignore that their life is a monotonous one. Is sad because in literature the character who want immortality are use to be the bad ones I was reading some interesting essay a few days ago:
The concept of immortality has been dealt with in countless works of fiction, but looking at a lot of fantasies, it seems that the characters who want to attain the power to live forever are usually not the good guys, but the bad guys. Even if the protagonists seek or consider immortality, typically they eventually learn not to desire it or otherwise somehow change their minds. In Tuck Everlasting, Winnie ultimately decides against staying young forever to be with Jesse. Harry Potter's advantage over Voldemort is that he does not fear death more than anything and share his wish to be immortal. The Fountain, a film about trying to conquer death, in the end is about the acceptance of death and the triumph of love over it. Captain Jack Sparrow, after he has already died once before and been damned to his own personal hell, makes it his primary goal to keep from ever having to die again, but then one of his only truly heroic acts ever is when he gives up the chance for immortality to help someone else. You just don't find many stories that end with the main characters happily enjoying an endless future they have to look forward to after drinking from the fountain of youth, but rather ones in which this is a possibility but instead they end with something learned, something found that is more important than not having to die. And while something new and original is often good to be tried in the world of fiction, usually what you find when writers try radically different approaches to storytelling is that the old formulas you have seen work again and again were always successful for a reason.
[Real Endings / Essay]
I hope that the book title represent a new beginning for Edward not for Bella as a vampire because it will be the most ironic title I ever seen /haha/. And I hope that Meyer will be truth to her values because what I saw about her is that she is a woman with a very strong spiritual background and I admire that about her. It will be ironic that after she says that she was very pro-human she covert Bella in a creature who by literature folklore is dammed. If you are not pro-bite you can join this forum:
The concept of immortality has been dealt with in countless works of fiction, but looking at a lot of fantasies, it seems that the characters who want to attain the power to live forever are usually not the good guys, but the bad guys. Even if the protagonists seek or consider immortality, typically they eventually learn not to desire it or otherwise somehow change their minds. In Tuck Everlasting, Winnie ultimately decides against staying young forever to be with Jesse. Harry Potter's advantage over Voldemort is that he does not fear death more than anything and share his wish to be immortal. The Fountain, a film about trying to conquer death, in the end is about the acceptance of death and the triumph of love over it. Captain Jack Sparrow, after he has already died once before and been damned to his own personal hell, makes it his primary goal to keep from ever having to die again, but then one of his only truly heroic acts ever is when he gives up the chance for immortality to help someone else. You just don't find many stories that end with the main characters happily enjoying an endless future they have to look forward to after drinking from the fountain of youth, but rather ones in which this is a possibility but instead they end with something learned, something found that is more important than not having to die. And while something new and original is often good to be tried in the world of fiction, usually what you find when writers try radically different approaches to storytelling is that the old formulas you have seen work again and again were always successful for a reason.
[Real Endings / Essay]
I hope that the book title represent a new beginning for Edward not for Bella as a vampire because it will be the most ironic title I ever seen /haha/. And I hope that Meyer will be truth to her values because what I saw about her is that she is a woman with a very strong spiritual background and I admire that about her. It will be ironic that after she says that she was very pro-human she covert Bella in a creature who by literature folklore is dammed. If you are not pro-bite you can join this forum:
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Peace
Doxys
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