Twilight | Teen Ink

Twilight

November 2, 2007
By Anonymous

Twilight by Stephenie Meyer

When seventeen-year-old Isabella Swan moves to the extraordinarily damp town of Forks, Washington, she thinks the only problems that she'll have to face will be the possibility of shriveling up from the lack of sun and convincing the nosy townsfolk to drop the “Is” and call her Bella. What Bella hadn't expected was the heap of near-fatal accidents that she would face in her new home. In addition to being chased by a pack of 20-year-olds in the back alleyways of Port Angeles, a nearby tourist trap, and nearly crushed to death by a runaway car in an ice-covered parking lot, Bella meets Edward Cullen, the perfect, pale, bronze-haired boy in her Biology class who turns the world that she thought she knew upside down. What Bella doesn't know when she first meets him is that Edward and his family (or at least the four equally-beautiful siblings he attends Forks High with, and their two parents) have a secret. The Cullens are vampires, and Edward has never smelt anything as alluring – or appetizing – as Bella.

It's hard to believe that Twilight is Stephenie Meyer's first novel, for her writing is filled with the sort of ripe wisdom that comes with experience. Her ingenious voice is able transform ink and paper into a fictional world that feels devastatingly real. The intensely passionate love that she describes between the story's two heroes is the stuff that Shakespeare himself might envy. Eloquently drawing her inspiration from the most famous European classics (Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet, Brontë's Wurthering Heights, and Austen's Pride & Prejudice), Meyer has also managed to create two equally-stimulating sequels that continue Bella and Edward's journey, but with a few added acquaintances along the way.

Twilight has sparked a worldwide phenomenon that has turned ordinary fantasy-seekers into the vampires of Meyer's words; “thirsty” for more and more. Twilight is the perfect mix of brilliant writing and gifted storytelling for those who enjoy fantasy, science fiction, or even a heroic love story. Its meaning is true and its tale is captivating.



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This article has 4 comments.


on Jan. 7 2011 at 6:13 pm
readaholic PLATINUM, Tomahawk, Wisconsin
27 articles 0 photos 425 comments

Favorite Quote:
I&#039;d rather fail because I fell on my own face than fall because someone tripped me up<br /> ~Jhonen Vasquez

I agree!  I was agreeing with her description of the book up until she starts praising Meyer with all this pure opinion on how good it is and comparing it to much better books.  The Twilight books are ok.  Just ok, not legendary.  The thing that draws people in is not for rich storylines, well-developed characters, or any of that.  Girls read it because Edward is the perfect guy and they want to be Bella, their rolemodel.  Thinking about reading Twilight?  Is it because you think they're good...or because "everyone else" is reading them? Yeah.  That's what I thought.  Not saying they're bad, they're just not good!!

karyin said...
on Oct. 20 2008 at 7:10 pm
the twilight series is so good. They are the best books ive ever read. I think that meyer really brings the characters to life. i plan on reading all the books in the series, im almost done and im going to read anything that she comes out with.

Ashley said...
on Oct. 2 2008 at 3:32 am
I don't think Meyer is a very good writer at all and it's not ingenius. She abuses a thesaurus for a new word and has no character development at all. 300 pages of thoughts and feelings and about 100 of plot - and the thoughts and feeling aren't developed at all, just descriptions. Shakespeare is probably flipping in his grave after what you said about him being 'envious' of this. And aside from the Byronic hero that Meyer abuses, her story doesn'thave much in common with those British classics.

mommag523 said...
on Sep. 13 2008 at 7:19 pm
I think this is the best article! It really gives you a good understanding of the plot and characters!