Twilight Movie – Book reviewed

There’s a valid reason well over 10 million Twilight series books are in hard copy. Twilight, the first in the series, is the addictive adventure of two young people –- Bella, a regular girl, and Edward, a wonderful gentleman and … a vampire. This is the type of novel you can read in just a few days, becoming immersed in its fantastical world and oblivious to your physical surroundings. While not the next great thing in modern literary mastery , it’s a pleasurable book to get lost in and comes to an end much too swiftly.

Advantages

* Very entertaining, fast-paced tale of romance and suspense
* Rather safe for a adolescent vampire love story
* The notion of good vampires is unusual and intriguing

Negative aspects

* The text is actually clunky once in a while
* Edward’s perfection is over reashing, even for a fictitious super-human
* Occasionally, Edward and Bella’s relationship can appear more like that of a father and child

Outline

* ‘Twilight’ by Stephenie Meyer was initially published in October 2005.
* Publisher: Little, Brown
* 512 Pages

Book Review – ‘Twilight’ by Stephenie Meyer – Review

Twilight is relayed through seventeen-year-old Bella Swan, who is forced to move from out west in Phoenix to the minor community of Forks, Washington, to dwell with her estranged father for the rest of high school. It is here, she discovers Edward, a vampire and his family unit, who possess an other-worldly and beckoning beauty and grace to which Bella Swan is drawn. The Twilight series is the adventure of Bella Swan and Edward Cullen’s burgeoning relationship, brimming with standard adolescent theatre alongside the unexpected, because, in the end, Edward and his family are vampires. These underworld mates have preferred to deny their natural desire to taste human blood, instead slaking their whole thirst with the blood of wildlife. Bella rapidly detects , even so, that not all vampires in her life are constrained by such values.

The book has been lauded for its handling of sexuality and morality. Despite the fact that there’s a great deal of yearning and sensuous moments, there is no love-making, alcohol consumption, or illegal substance glorification. Edward refuses Bella’s motivation to be converted into a vampire herself, on good grounds that it wouldn’t be the proper thing to inflict.

Twilight is an easy and pleasurable read. Its first-person viewpoint will keep the the pages turning. This isn’t a masterpiece of literary achievement, however. You have to accept it for what it is –- a one of a kind and thrilling, if not perfectly penned, account. Twilight will almost certainly appeal to young girls and many ladies of all ages, but possibly not to the majority of adult males. It’s guaranteed to help make readers excited to devour the following three novels.

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