Breaking Dawn, by Stephenie Meyer

Aug 18, 2008 20:22

Breaking Dawn
by Stephenie Meyer
756 pages (hardcover)
Genre: Fiction/Fantasy/YA

What you've heard thus far about Breaking Dawn? All true. I won't bother to repeat the criticisms. Meyer's prose is clunky but bearably so; in this book particularly, she invents way too many minor characters; and she doesn't understand the fundamentals of plot theory ( Read more... )

author: meyer stephenie, genre: fantasy, book reviews 2008, genre: young adult

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Comments 9

beteio August 19 2008, 01:56:34 UTC
You can probably imagine my reaction to just reading the words BREAKING DAWN. If you can't, my thought process goes pretty much like this: AHHH TWILIGHT HATE KILL DIE.

Besides that, the first thing that comes to mind reading your notes on the TWILIGHT series's conservatism is the whole CHRONICLES OF NARNIA versus THE GOLDEN COMPASS "thing". You've undoubtedly read about it somewhere, how THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA movies have done ridiculously better than THE GOLDEN COMPASS in theaters, probably due in no small part to the different roles that religion plays in each of them, and the general bashing of THE GOLDEN COMPASS by the religious community.

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keilexandra August 19 2008, 02:27:59 UTC
Well, duh. Creationism vs. atheism, which do you think is going to do better? It's progress that GOLDEN COMPASS even got made into a movie.

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gsconahan August 19 2008, 08:18:21 UTC
It was made into a fairly bad, dumbed-down movie for kids. If they’d actually made a good movie, it’s possible that those figures would have been entirely different.

I think that if they had actually done justice to the source material, the ideological differences wouldn’t have weighed as much.

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keilexandra August 19 2008, 13:29:49 UTC
I haven't seen either movie, but I would bet (if I gambled, which I don't on principle) that they dumbed down the movie to mask the ideology.

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sarahbrand August 19 2008, 06:40:33 UTC
raecarson had a post the other day on the Twilight series as fundie-girl fantasy, which I thought was particularly on-target.

My sister is about your age and she loves the books. I still haven't asked her what she thought of Breaking Dawn; she's been oddly quiet on the subject since she finished it, so it looks like I might have to bring it up. *g* As for me, I read 2/3 of it and picked up the rest from cleolinda's summary... I think "horrified fascination" would be the phrase. Like watching a #1 bestselling trainwreck.

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wolfpurrs August 20 2008, 03:23:26 UTC
In a world of rapidly liberalizing children's literature - it is listed for "young readers" - I see no problem in there being a few popular books out there for the kids (and older readers) who like the idea of saving themselves for a white wedding, and like the idea that being a mother is something that could be the single proudest achievement of their lives. I don't see that it changes Bella's personality, either (she remains a consistently whiny, annoying twit imo). This is a character, an opinion, and Stephenie Meyers is certainly entitled to it, just as you're entitled express a disagreement with that stance. Conservatives are not all the complete nuts you see on television, as I'm sure you've noticed - same as not all Liberals are running around screaming obscenities and ass-fucking in the streets. I'm in no way saying that this book is the be all end all - it's absolutely got flaws and a number of loose ends that she seems to have tied together with colorful, but not very effective, fluffy yarn. If you get too wrapped up in that ( ... )

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keilexandra August 20 2008, 03:43:19 UTC
I do agree that Meyer is entitled to her opinion--I note and criticize all hidden agendas, so to speak, including those of my favorite author Guy Gavriel Kay. (I'm also a hypocrite, but hey--nothing wrong with that.)

However, have you read BREAKING DAWN? I do think that Bella's personality changes when she conceives Nessie. The baby becomes her sole focus, -superseding- Edward--far different from the previous three books.

The magic of TWILIGHT worked for me in the beginning, but as I continue to put faith in Meyer, she continues to let me down. A successful story, for me, would be enthralling enough to silence my critic-brain; the Twilight series has never managed that, but I don't regret reading TWILIGHT for the fluff value.

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wolfpurrs August 20 2008, 03:24:21 UTC
Meyer*, sorry. ^^;

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