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Book Review
Twilight β “twilight” series.
- Stephenie Meyer
- Fantasy , Paranormal , Romance
- Little, Brown and Company, a division of the Hachette Book Group
- ALA Best Books for Young Adults, 2006; ALA Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers, 2006; Amazon.com Best of the Decadeβ¦So Far (Teens), 2010
Year Published
This romantic vampire fantasy is the first book in the ” Twilight ” series by Stephenie Meyer and is published by Little, Brown and Company, a division of the Hachette Book Group.
Twilight is written for kids ages 9 and up. The age range reflects readability and not necessarily content appropriateness.
Plot Summary
When 17-year-old Bella Swan moves to her dad’s home in perpetually-cloudy Forks, Wash., she has little hope of enjoying her new life. Her father, Charlie, is the small town’s police chief. He lives as a resigned bachelor in the same house he owned during his brief marriage to Bella’s mom. Bella enrolls in the high school and makes some new acquaintances. While sitting with them in the cafeteria, she spots a group of five strange and incredibly beautiful people and learns that they are the Cullens. Two sets of them (Alice and Jasper, Emmett and Rosalie) are couples, but they’re all in the same family, adopted by the town’s young doctor. They keep to themselves. Bella later shares a lab table with the fifth member of the group, named Edward. She’s taken aback by his hostile behavior toward her. He sits far away from her and casts searing glances in her direction. She later sees him in the office trying to change his schedule to avoid her. She wonders what could make him hate her so much.
When icy weather hits, Bella’s truck and another student’s car collide in the school parking lot. Edward, whom Bella had seen standing far away, is suddenly at her side and saves her life by holding back the other car. She’s perplexed by the deep hand indentions he’s left in the vehicle. He’s reticent when she asks how he got to her so fast and had the strength to save her. He does, however, begin to act more friendly toward her at school. Through their cryptic banter in class, Bella becomes more and more attracted to the pale, gorgeous boy whose eyes “smolder” and drive her wild.
On a day trip with other school friends, Bella runs into an old acquaintance who lives on the Indian reservation. Jacob Black, a few years younger than Bella, is eager to impress and reveals classified information about the Cullens when Bella prods him. Jacob explains that the ancestors of his tribe have a territorial agreement with the Cullens, as the Cullens and other “cold ones” are their mortal enemies. Back home on the Internet, Bella further investigates Jacob’s claims and discovers Edward’s chilling secret: He and his family are vampires.
Bella knows she should be more fearful, but Edward’s increasing attention, protective nature and passionate gazes have left her entranced. Bella travels to a larger city with two girls from school to help them shop for prom dresses. When she gets separated from her friends, a group of four men surround her in a dark alley. Just in time, Edward appears and saves her. She’s stunned by his intense anger and often witnesses it in the days thereafter. He takes her to dinner and calms down before driving her back to Forks.
Edward warns her that he’s dangerous and that she should stay away from him. Thoroughly smitten, Bella repeatedly tells him (and herself) she doesn’t care what happens to her. No fate could be worse than being separated from him. Edward takes Bella to a remote area in the forest, allowing her to see how his skin glows in the sunlight. The glow is just one of the reasons Edward and his “family” (the others in his vampire coven) must stay in places like Forks where there’s significant cloud cover. Edward explains that his family attempts to be civilized, eating only animals and not people (though it is like subsisting on a diet of tofu and soy milk). Bella’s scent is so tantalizing to Edward, he says she’s like a drug to him. The same urges that cause him to want to devour her (literally) also drive him to protect and love her. He’s tormented, knowing he should stay away from her for her own safety but feeling he can’t bear to be without her.
Edward takes Bella home to meet his family. Most of the clan welcomes her, though Rosalie feels Bella is a threat to their life in Forks. Alice foresees a thunderstorm, and the vampires make a plan to play baseball high in the forest. When Bella joins them, she understands why loud peals of thunder are necessary to cover up their powerful hits. In mid-game, the family catches the scent of other vampires. There isn’t time to get Bella out of the area, so they try their best to cover her scent as they talk to the new vampires Laurent, James and James’ mate, Victoria. But James, a tracker, quickly picks up Bella’s scent. When the two vampire clans part ways, Edward tells Bella he’s read James’ thoughts. James will stop at nothing to devour her.
Alice and Jasper go with Bella to her home, where she quickly packs and lies to her dad, telling him she can no longer live in Forks. They drive her to Phoenix while Edward and the others protect her father and track James. Alice, Jasper and Bella hole up in a Phoenix hotel and wait for directions from the others. One morning, Bella receives a call. James is on the other end of the line, telling her he has her mother. He orders her to pretend she’s talking to her mom so the vampires won’t catch on. James directs Bella to lose Alice and Jasper. She gets away from them in the airport where they’re supposed to pick up Edward. James directs her to the dance studio she attended as a child. When she arrives, she realized James has tricked her. Her mother’s voice on the phone was from an old videotape. James brutally attacks Bella. When she’s nearly lost consciousness, she hears Edward’s voice. He and the rest of his family have arrived to kill James. It’s up to Edward to suck the poison out of Bella’s blood without killing her or turning her into a vampire. Though it takes every ounce of self-control he has, Edward manages to save Bella’s life.
The Cullens help Bella make up a detailed story to calm her parents. She returns to Forks to recover. Edward tricks her into getting dressed up, leg cast and all, to go with him to the prom. She begs him to change her into a vampire so they can always be together, but he refuses.
Christian Beliefs
Carlisle, head of the Cullen clan, keeps a cross from the 1600s in their home. It was carved by his father and hung on the wall of the vicarage where he (the father) preached. Carlisle’s father was intolerant of Roman Catholics and other religions, and he led witch hunts in which many innocent people were burned based on accusations of practicing black magic or being werewolves and vampires. On one such raid, a real vampire attacked Carlisle and changed him.
Edward says it’s hard for him to believe that the world could have been created all on its own.
Other Belief Systems
Bella learns about vampire lore on the Internet, though Edward later dispels some misconceptions. In addition to their regular vampire qualities, which include incredible speed and strength, several of the Cullens have unique abilities. Edward can hear people’s thoughts, Alice can see the future, and Jasper has the ability to manipulate people’s emotional states.
Bella wonders if by saving her from the van, Edward was tampering with her fate. She says good luck avoids her and suggests at another time that luck or good odds were on her side. Edward gives in to his love for Bella because he says he’s decided if he’s going to hell, he might as well do it thoroughly. James says he has a sixth sense when he’s hunting.
Jacob tells Bella about Quileute Indian legends dating back to the time of Noah and the flood. The Indians supposedly survived by tying their canoes to the tops of the tallest trees. Another legend suggests the Quileutes descended from wolves.
When Bella hears Edward’s voice after James’ violent attack, she says she hears the sound of an angel calling her name, calling her to the only heaven she wants. Later, she says Edward is her life, and he’s the only thing it would hurt her to lose.
Authority Roles
Bella’s dad, Charlie, is a bachelor who spends most of his time fishing, watching sports or working. Unused to having parental responsibilities, he makes weak efforts to monitor Bella’s activities. Bella appears much smarter than her father since her frequent lies keep him thoroughly in the dark. At the outset, she “lets him know” where she’s going because she feels asking permission sets a bad precedent. Charlie imposes some rules and curfews after Bella’s attack, but he still has no idea what kind of boy his daughter is dating. Before Bella’s mom, Renee, remarried, Bella was in charge. She was the one making sure the bills were paid and that she and her “erratic, harebrained” mom had food on the table.
Profanity & Violence
The words d–n, h— and butt each appears a few times. Bella endures a violent attack by a vampire. He strikes her in the chest, throws her into mirrors and crushes her leg by stepping on it. Glass cuts into her scalp and she begins to bleed profusely before she blacks out.
Sexual Content
Edward and Bella engage in a good deal of kissing and sensual (not overtly sexual) caressing, primarily of the face and neck. “Smoldering” glances, passionate whispers and purposeful breathing of one another’s scents heighten their emotions. They are careful not to act too intensely on their passion for fear that Edward will lose control and bite Bella.
Though Edward is attracted to Bella physically to some degree, her scent is her most tantalizing attribute to him. His primary desire as a vampire is to devour her and taste her blood. Edward sometimes stays all night in Bella’s room to watch her sleep. Edward asks a suggestive question about Bella’s sexual history, and she indicates she is a virgin since she’s never felt about anyone like she does about him.
Discussion Topics
Get free discussion questions for this book and others, at FocusOnTheFamily.com/discuss-books .
Additional Comments
Anger: Edward longs to be with Bella, yet he knows his bloodlust puts her in mortal danger. He’s tormented and angered by the decisions he must make and by the intensity of effort required to maintain control when he’s with her. He never physically hurts Bella, but he often lashes out in ways that frighten her. He sometimes demonstrates “righteous indignation” toward evil people or other vampires. Still, his fierce temper and the magnitude of his fury produce fear and anxiety in Bella.
Lying: Bella frequently lies to her parents about her activities or relationships, even when she knows the lies put her in dangerous situations. She lies to her friends to get out of things. She often lies to Edward, telling him she’s not afraid or conflicted. After she is attacked by another vampire, the Cullen family helps her concoct an elaborate lie about why she left Forks and how she got hurt.
Substances: Bella admits to “gratuitously” taking cold medicine on one occasion to help her sleep. Edward compares the scent of blood to a drug or alcohol addiction. He says Bella’s scent is like his “exact brand of heroine.”
Theft: Edward steals a car in his effort to get to Bella before James devours her.
Suicide: Before her vampire days, Esme lost a baby. She jumped off a cliff in her grief.
PluggedIn.com , an entertainment and media ministry of Focus on the Family, has written an article that offers an overview of the whole “Twilight” series: Darkness Falls After Twilight .
Producers often use a book as a springboard for a movie idea or to earn a specific rating. Because of this, a movie may differ from the novel. To better understand how this book and movie differ, compare the book review with Plugged In’s movie review.
Book reviews cover the content, themes and world-views of fiction books, not their literary merit, and equip parents to decide whether a book is appropriate for their children. A book’s inclusion does not constitute an endorsement by Focus on the Family.
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Twilight by Stephenie Meyer | Parent Guide & Review
This post may contain affiliate links. If you click on a link and decide to buy, I make a small commission for referring you. This helps me make a few cents for doing what I love.
Twilight will always have a special place in my heart because I remember reading and discussing it with my friends when I was 13 and 14. After all of the books came out, my mom mentioned that if she had read all of them first, she would have made me wait until I was older. That conversation sparked the idea for The Book Nanny and made it possible almost ten years later. Keep reading for the Twilight Parent Guide parents should have had 15 years ago!
Summary of Twilight
When Bella Swan shows up in the small town of Forks, her plan is to endure high school for two years and get out. Instead, she discovers that vampires are real and not a nightmare. One of those vampires craves her blood above all others.
Twilight Parent Guide
Language: 7 biblical swear words; 1.4% of pages contain language; Adult Content: PG-13 a couple of heated kisses and allusions to sex; Violence: PG-13 for the boss fight at the end, and thematic elements
Judging a Book by the Movie
Everything has both pros and cons. However, when it comes to Twilight, I just hear the bad. There is a bad stigma around the Twilight series from the movies, book critics, and relationship experts criticism. Let just start by saying the books were way better than the movies.
While I was reading, I pictured Kirsten Stewart as Bella but with a completely different personality. If you base your ideas of Twilight on the movies, you got the main story. But it’s hard to represent the inner thoughts of characters on film. So I suggest at least reading the first book (or half of the first book) before forming your opinion.
Critics of Stephenie Meyer
As for the criticism from readers and relationship experts, yes, the book isn’t perfect. Stephenie Meyer tried her best when writing it. I can’t fault her for accomplishing something that I only dream of someday. She has written not just one book but nine. Plus, she has more than made up for her shortcomings by rewriting Twilight twice! Once as a gender-flipped novel and again from Edward’s perspective. Is Stephenie Meyer’s writing perfect? Nope, but no one’s writing ever is. For more about Stephenie Meyer and her writing journey, check out this author spotlight.
Is Twilight Abusive?
One of the biggest criticisms of Twilight and later books in the series is the characteristics of a toxic relationship in Bella and Edward’s relationship. Some critics argue that Twilight romanticizes abusive traits and holds them up as a standard for ideal relationships. I can understand why they would say Bella and Edward’s relationship is toxic. They recognize and acknowledge this is the series and then work to change it. As long as you realize that it isn’t a perfect relationship and don’t try to copy it, you’ll be good.
This would be a great topic to discuss with your teen or young adult while reading the books. Books are great conversation starters. You could talk about what a healthy relationship looks like and the warning signs of a toxic or abusive relationship. Talking about touchy topics in a book can provide a natural setting for hard but necessary conversations.
Twilight Parent Guide Recommendations
Twilight has some sexual innuendos. In later books, there is making out, an attempted seduction, and a honeymoon. There aren’t any sex scenes, but I recommend waiting until at least 16 to start the series, so you can read all of them at once. I appreciate that only biblical profanity is used and is relatively low compared with similar books.
If you enjoyed Twilight, here are some other books you might enjoy: City of Bones, Vampire Academy, Marked, A Kiss of Deception, Everless, and A Court of Thorns and Roses. Right now, I’m working on a long post with lots of fantastic fantasy reads. Keep an eye out or join our email list to get blog updates.
Happy Reading! Emily
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Parent reviews of, twilight: the twilight saga, book 1.
- Common Sense Says
- Parents Say 132 Reviews
- Kids Say 602 Reviews
Parents Say
Based on 132 parent reviews
Parent Reviews
It's fine for kids, report this review, bella's just like us ....human.
This title has:
- Great role models
Good, not revolutionary. Not explicit but definitely mature.
- Educational value
- Great messages
- Too much violence
- Too much sex
An addictive read (complete with series), however may not be the best message for young girls
No plot. tediously long series.
I liked it because Iβm a big vampire fan
What to Read Next
Crave, Book 1
City of Bones: The Mortal Instruments, Book 1
Marked: House of Night, Book 1
Vampire, werewolf, and zombie books, twilight book series, related topics.
- Magic and Fantasy
- High School
- Monsters, Ghosts, and Vampires
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Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners.
Twilight by Stephenie Meyer (Twilight Saga: Book 1)
After seeing and enjoying the movie Twilight , I had to get the book. If I was less of a glutton for punishment I probably would have heeded the warning signs. Every teenage girl I knew of swooning over the book and the Romeo of the story, Edward Cullen. I even had a 24 year old friend update her status with something along the lines of “After Edward Cullen I can never again want a human male.”
Also, I know I can be obsessive and with the exception of a small few, once I read the first book in a series, I have to read the whole series whether I really want to or not. I don’t like unfinished stories. Did I really want to subject myself to at least 4 (which was the length of the saga when I bought Twilight and I hadn’t researched whether or not it would get longer) teen love books? I didn’t do much thinking when I spotted the book for £4, knowing how much I enjoyed the movie; I willingly handed over my money in order to be Bella and Edwards’s voyeur.
The book begins with Isabella “Bella” Swann moving from sunny Phoenix, Arizona to live with her dad, the local police Chief, Charlie Swann, in wet and dismal Forks, Washington. Almost immediately, it is obvious that Bella wishes she still had an option to live in Phoenix, which only increases when she meets Edward Cullen in class. Edward looks at and treats Bella as if she is something dark and sticky on the underside of his shoe, with a hostility Bella has never felt before.
“The class seemed to drag on longer than the others. Was it because the day was finally coming to a close, or because I was waiting for his tight fist to loosen? It never did; he continued to sit so still it looked like he wasn't breathing. What was wrong with him? Was this his normal behavior? I questioned my judgment on Jessica's bitterness at lunch today. Maybe she was not as resentful as I'd thought. It couldn't have anything to do with me. He didn't know me from Eve. I peeked up at him one more time, and regretted it. He was glaring down at me again, his black eyes full of revulsion. As I flinched away from him, shrinking against my chair, the phrase if looks could kill suddenly ran through my mind.” An extract from Twilight
Edward continues to treat Bella this way until she is almost killed by a car in the school car park. One of her fellow students comes careening towards Bella after losing control of his car and is almost about to sandwich Bella between it and Bella’s 1950’s truck. In steps Edward Cullen from the other side of the school car park to stop the car from almost certainly killing the girl he has so openly disliked.
So begins Bella and Edwards forbidden romance, with revelations aplenty coming out about Edward until Jacob Black, the son of Chief Swann’s best friend, tells Bella about the ancient legends surrounding his tribe including those of “the cold ones.” Bella finds out about the true nature of the Cullen’s being vampires. A romance book which ends with a fantastic, high-octane finale, I’m sure most readers will find something they like about Stephenie Meyer’s first novel.
One of the influences that Meyer lists for her writing is Romeo and Juliet . This is clearly evident throughout the book as hardly anyone believes they should be together, Bella’s friends obviously don’t agree with it, and Rosie Cullen seems to hate Bella with the hate she believed Edward once had for her.
The book is full of romance, but is padded with enough action and vampirism to keep most fantasy readers from putting the book down. A kind of Harry Potter meets Shakespeare , the book is a fine read with plenty of talking points that I’d better leave out of the review for fear of ruining the twists and turns for would-be readers of the book.
Overall, I believe Twilight deserves a 7.5/10. A Shakespearean love story with monsters and myth.
- Buy on Amazon
Review by Stephen Messham
10 positive reader review(s) for Twilight
Stephenie Meyer biography
Twilight Saga
- Twilight (Twilight Saga: Book 1)
- New Moon (Twilight Saga: Book 2)
- Eclipse (Twilight Saga: Book 3)
- Breaking Dawn (Twilight Saga: Book 4)
Clementine from Australia
The book Twilight is about a seventeen year old girl named Bella who moves to a small rainy town called Forks, to live with her dad. Bella’s life is pretty ordinary, gloomy, but still ordinary, until she meets a strange boy named Edward. Later in the book she creates a theory that Edward is a vampire, which turns out to be true. Soon she finds out that there’s a dangerous side of her discovery. I particularly like the plot line in the story, because the author, Stephenie Meyer uses several writing techniques to build up suspense and tension along the plot line, I also find the plot line unpredictable. The only fault I find with Twilight is that at the beginning and several parts during the book may be slightly disengaging for readers as there is no action for some time and many people would stop reading. Twilight is categoriesed as a romance fantasy book. Which is rated for 13+ by parents and 11+ by children and teens. I would rate the first book of Twilight for 11+ however, it also depends on how mature the reader is. I give the book 9 stars because the plot is very intriguing, even though it has faults.
Rachel from United states
The book Twilight was about Bella moving away from Phoenix to go live with her dad for a while because her mom wanted to travel with phil. As soon as she got to forks Washington she got a truck from her dad who got it from Billy Black. She got to meet Jacob Black and was a werewolf. When she got to school she made some friends and met the Cullen Family. She fell in love with Edward the first time she saw him. Over time she got closer and closer to Edward's big secret of being a vampire. The time when she found out she was not afraid of him she was afraid of losing him. I would love to have a love connection like they do but I think Bella made a big mistake for falling in love with Edward. I am a Jacob fan myself and I always wanted to see what they would do about the whole Vampire war problem. I absolutly loved this book but if she fell in love with Jacob it would be even better.
Anindita from India
This book is the best... I love it
Kaya from Morocco
I completely love the book how's it's full of love and romance something that we don't see these days some people saying that bella is an independent figure i completely disagree with them bella was depending on Edward because what she been through wasn't human it was supernatural what are you expecting to throw her life to a complete end that's such a rubbish i love the sweetness of the story it's kinda better sweet it might get slightly boring in the middle but it gets better and in my opinion i think that the book is better than the movie i think that Emma Stewart isn't good for bella's swan character while Robert Pattinson was perfect for the role in few words twilight is a delightful book can't wait to read the rest
Kelli from United States
THE BEST BOOK EVER
Lauren from United States
Reasons to read this book: 1) you are newcomer to vampires or 2) are between the ages of 12-17. Twilight is to vampire lore as fairytales are to Grimm's tales. Far from the real, abet mythological, truth. This is a land not far away from our reality, where vampire's roam about not dying in the sun, but sparkle like a diamond. They live among us hiding in plain sight, avoiding bright spots? The main protagonists of the books are smitten in awkward teenage love. One confused about the other's strange behavior. The other worried about prohibited interspecies co-mingling and associated other issues. This book devolves into an emotionally abusive rollercoaster. Unless you really like drama, the following books are better for newcomers to vampire lore: Robin McKinley's Sunshine, PC Cast's Marked, or Darren Shaw's Cirque de Freak. Overall, when I was a teenager, I read this and never thought about it again. I'll give it a 6 for some creativity about the lore, but only a 6 because of the plot line.
Blah balh from Heaven
This is a really good book u should read it I m waiting for another series.
Hayley from New Jersey
I love this book
Sarah from USA
I love this book.
Taniya from India
Stephenie Meyer, India wants to read beyond Breaking Dawn part 2... we are crazy about the story... it's the single story which we think should never stop... plzzzzzzzz, we the readers want more series of Twilight... just break all the barriers of Twilight and go on writing about the mesmerizing love story of Bella and Edward... waitng for another series of Twilight...
Holly from England
SERIOUSLY GOOD BOOK, it's got so much detail and is very romantic, but I love the way at every moment there relationship was hanging on an edge. I was always turning the page expecting to find out if their fragile relationship would survive but I never got an answer, all the haters have just got to stop being so rude, and I know everyone's entitled to there own opinion but at least try to say it nicely. People keep saying it gives young girls the wrong message, but as I young girl myself it honestly doesn't and I know that having a boyfriend isn't the most important thing, and so many adults think us young girls believe that the way Bella stays with Edward even though he could hurt her and is dangerous makes us believe that abuse is alright but it's nothing like that and we are not that stupid to think that it is ok. Plus Edward hardly abuses Bella and when he does hurt her he doesn't mean to and when he stops her going places it's only because he is so worried about losing her. Anyway,I loved the book and how it made me feel excited and anxious. So I recommend it to years 12 plus.
Kirti from India
I just love it .
Andy from Reading
The books are reasonably well written given that they are for teenagers, New Moon was extremely whiny though. These are overall enjoyable books and I would recommend them to any teenager. I particularly enjoyed Breaking Dawn after Bella was turned as there is more humour and fun involved.
Britt from Georgia
THE best book.
9.2 /10 from 15 reviews
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Stephenie Meyer
Published 2005 434 Pages
When seventeen year-old Bella Swan leaves sunny Arizona to live with her father in the small and gloomy Pacific North-West town of Forks she doesn’t expect to like it. After all she has made excuses not to go there enough times over the past few years. If living in Forks, with its constant mist and rain, wasn’t bad enough she will have to make a whole new set of friends and settle into a new school.
Bella soon makes some new friends at school but when she sees a boy called Edward Cullen sitting with his brothers and sisters in the cafeteria she is instantly intrigued. Edward is stunningly attractive, almost inhumanly beautiful, and yet he is an outsider too. Although Edward and his family have lived in Forks for two years they have never really been accepted by the townsfolk.
At first Edward is aloof, sometimes it almost seems like he can’t stand to be in the same room as her, but eventually they strike up an unlikely friendship. Even as Bella falls hopelessly and irrevocably in love with Edward, she still can’t work out exactly what makes him so different to everyone else.
On a trip to the beach, Bella is told of the local legend about the “cold ones”, a group of blood drinkers who have sworn off hunting humans but are still not welcome on Indian land because vampires are not to be trusted. Realising Edward is vampire changes nothing for Bella, she knows that she still loves him even if he’s not human.
Edward and his whole family are vampires. Edward himself was made a vampire when he was seventeen years-old, although that was at the end of World War I. For Edward his love for Bella is both a delight and a torment. A delight because she is the first person he has loved since he was made a vampire. A torment because although he has sworn off human blood and only hunts animals the craving for human blood never truly leaves him and the very scent of her also stirs his hunger for blood….
Twilight is the story of Edward and Bella’s romance. Forget any vampire romance you have read before, Twilight is so unique it is almost like it’s in its own genre. The book is marketed at Young Adult readers but it has the ability to cross age barriers and will satisfy both teenagers and adults alike.
The story is told in first person from the perspective of Bella, so the reader only ever know what she knows, making Edward and his family a mystery that is slowly unravelled through out the book. Even by the end of the book I was still thirsting for more of the Cullen family back story - hopefully their characters might be developed further in future books. Bella herself is a well written and realistic character, shy and lacking in confidence, her sarcastic inner voice narrates the story for the reader.
Twilight is simply and yet beautifully written. The descriptions of Forks leave you feeling like you can almost smell the damp air and hear the rain falling on the roof.
The romance between Edward and Bella is both touching and compelling. There is a melancholic feel to their impossible love, yet at the same time they both are unwilling to give up hope that their relationship is not doomed. The book reaches a fever pitch of excitement as the romance between Bella and Edward turns into a frantic race to stay alive.
I have heard Twilight described as “a vampire story for people who don’t like vampire stories” and I think I would agree with that. This book really has something for everyone. Young adult readers, vampire fans or romance readers will all find Twilight to be an appealing story.
For a Young Adult novel the book is quite long but don’t let that put you off reading it because each page is to be savoured. Believe me, this is one book that you won’t want to end.
LoveVampires Review Rating:
Twilight Audio CD
Twilight is also available in audio CD format too. Narrated by Ilyana Kadushin the novel is completely unabridged and is nearly 13 hours long (that’s 11 compact discs.)
Audio is obviously a convenient format, you can listen to a novel just about anywhere and anytime. Twilight was the first novel that I ever listened to in audio format and it was a strangely enjoyable experience. The story is unabridged so the listener doesn’t miss a single word, although this does make for a long listening experience!
Ilyana does a good job of narrating the story and manages to illustrate the story will with just her voice, although her rendition of Edward’s speech does take a little getting used to. She uses an odd deep, soft, breathy voice whenever Edward speaks and this was a little off-putting at first but all in all Twilight in audio format is a great way to get another shot of Forks goodness.
Twilight audio sample
Related Links
Reviews of other books by this author.
You can find out more about Stephenie Meyer and read an excerpt from this book by visiting her web site. Visit Stephenie’s site.
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*Note: This is a review of Twilight , the first novel by Stephenie Meyer. This is NOT a review of the entire series – which is even more problematic.
I remember how popular Twilight was back when I was in school. After its publication in 2005, the novel by Stephanie Meyer was THE book everyone talked about. And when the movie was released in 2008, the vampire romance captivated teens worldwide.
But I was one of the few teens who didn’t read the book. I couldn’t read the novel or watch the film because I was unbelievably busy at the time. So despite the hype and frenzy around Twilight , I went about my life not knowing much about it. (Besides the fact that girls were torn between “Edward” the vampire and “Jacob” the werewolf.)
Now that I have the time, I finally read the novel that everyone was obsessed with 17 years ago. And… I’ve got stuff to say about it.
I’m sure most people already know the basic plot of Twilight from reading the book or watching the film. But if you haven’t done either of the two, here is a detailed summary:
Bella Moves to Forks, WA
Isabella “Bella” Swan moves from Phoenix, Arizona to Forks, Washington to live with her dad so that her mom can live with her boyfriend. She leaves her dear mother and hometown out of self-sacrifice and dreads living in the gloomy small town of Forks with her dad, who she rarely talks to. On the first day at her new school, she sees the “devastatingly beautiful” Cullens in the cafeteria and later finds out that her lab partner is one of the Cullens named Edward. But to her surprise, he glares at her with furious eyes and moves to the edge of his seat to stay as far as he can from her.
Edward Rescues
Despite his bizarre behavior and following absences, Bella and Edward eventually exchange a few words when he comes back to school. But one day, after he saves her from a deadly car accident, Bella realizes that he possesses superhuman strength and speed. They get to know each other more, with Edward looking out for her and giving her rides.
During her visit to Port Angeles with her school friends, Bella encounters a shady group of men who try to hurt her. She’s magically rescued by Edward who take her away in his car. That night, Bella finds out that Edward is a mind reading vampire who, with his family, refrains from drinking human blood.
Love & Danger
Being the “monster” that he is, Edward is unwilling to endanger Bella with his presence and tries to warn her to stay away from him. But regardless, the two grow very close, spending time alone with each other and learning everything about one another. Bella learns that the reason behind Edward’s strange behavior on her first day of school was the delicious “floral” scent she was giving off unintentionally to vampires.
They officially date, with Edward visiting Bella’s dad and Bella visiting his vampire family. But while Bella and the Cullens are playing “vampire baseball,” they encounter other vampires who feed on human blood. One of the vampires named James sets his eyes on Bella, so the Cullens set a plan to thwart his hunt. Bella gets tricked, falls into James’s trap, and faces imminent death.
Edward comes to the rescue, James the bloodthirsty vampire is killed, and long story short, Edward and Bella go to prom together. The novel ends with Bella wanting to become a vampire to live forever with Edward and with Edward, knowing the pains of becoming a vampire and living as one, adamantly against Bella’s wishes.
Twilight Book Review: The Good
To start with the positives, I personally think Stephenie Meyer did a great job writing about/for her teen audience. She starts with a strong hook with Bella facing her death and goes into the story with her dreaded first day of school, which is something every teen can relate to.
Bella is also very self-conscious, not wanting to stand out at all, just as most teens are when they’re in middle/high school.
Likeable Protagonist
On top of making her protagonist relatable, Meyer describes Bella as someone who’s modest despite being very pretty. Bella realizes her beauty for the first time when Edward the mind reading vampire tells her that lots of guys find her attractive.
She’s also mature for her age, caring more about her mother’s happiness than her own. All of these traits of Bella Swan make her a pretty likeable protagonist. At least in the beginning.
Teenage Dream Come True
But what Meyer did best was introducing the first hot Italian vampire to teen literature. There are lots of vampire romance novels out there, and perhaps there was already a tale about a sexy teen vampire before Twilight . But Meyer’s Edward Cullen was the first to really become popularized to the point where legions of fangirls cried over him.
I’ve never heard of the Stregoni Benefici (Italian vampires on the good side who fight against evil vampires) before, and I thought Meyer did a good job on her research to create the ultimate teen fantasy: a handsome, superhuman Italian teen vampire boyfriend who doesn’t drink human blood. Who goes against his instincts to be with the one and only girl he loves. (Click HERE for more on Edward Cullen.)
Twilight Book Review: The Bad & Ugly
Despite Meyer’s strengths and her successful launch of the perfect vampire boyfriend, Twilight is full of disturbing details.
π©Red Flag #1: Edward Cullen is 100 years old.
Even though he is stuck being 17 forever, he was “born in Chicago in 1901” (Meyer 287).
So… Edward, a hundred year old man, falls in love with Bella, a seventeen year old girl. Edward says himself:
For almost ninety years I’ve walked among my kind, and yours…all the time thinking I was complete in myself, not realizing what I was seeking. And not finding anything, because you weren’t alive yet.” From Twilight by Stephenie Meyer (pg 304).
π©Red Flag #2: Bella is OBSESSED with Edward.
When you fall in love, it’s normal to sometimes fall hard and obsess over your girlfriend/boyfriend to some degree. But Bella Swan takes her obsession with Edward Cullen to the next level.
She’s so excited and stressed for her trip with Edward that she “deliberately [takes] unnecessary cold medicine” to knock herself out for a good night’s sleep. So that her day with Edward will go smoothly next morning.
She even says that her life was about Edward since she’d come to Forks (251).
Not to mention the fact that she’s willing to die for him. She’s willing to leave behind her mom, dad, everyone she’d known, and even herself to go through excruciating, unbearable pain in order to become a vampire. Just to be with this handsome vampire she’d just met for a few months.
By the time I finished reading Twili ght, my regard for Bella Swan plummeted to the point where I didn’t want to read the next sequel.
π©Edward Cullen is a stalker.
Not only is he a 100 year old man calling himself a “sick, masochistic lion” that “fell in love with the lamb,” but also he’s a stalker (274). He confesses to Bella that he’d been spying on her in her house “almost every night” listening to her sleep talk (293).
Oh my God… Hot Italian vampire or not, this is beyond creepy!
If I found out that my crush at school had been following me, sneaking inside my home to watch me sleep every day… I would call the police.
But Bella, being the obsessed girl that she is, just feels embarrassed for having said Edward’s name in her sleep. She goes straight back to obsessing over him.
And it’s implied that this creep of a vampire tastes her teardrop:
He touched the corner of my eye, trapping [a tear] I missed. He lifted his finger, examining the drop of moisture broodingly. Then, so quickly I couldn’t be positive that he really did, he put his finger to his mouth to taste it.” From Twilight page 329.
I think, like what Robert Pattinson (actor who played Edward Cullen) said in one of his interviews, Edward would be a serial killer in real life…
As the first author to skillfully catapult a hot vampire boy into teen fiction, Stephenie Meyer enjoyed enormous commercial success. She knew exactly what her teen audience wanted/would like in her vampire romance novel.
But it glosses over and condones obsessive, disturbing and unhealthy behaviors. Twilight is a problematic teen romance novel about a stupid human girl and her creepy vampire boyfriend who she can’t live without.
I would recommend Twilight if you…
- are an upcoming author who wants to write the next bestselling teen romance novel like Stephenie Meyer.
- want to know why girls around the world fell in love with Twilight ‘s Edward Cullen back in the late 2000s. (If you want to know why teens fangirled over Jacob Black, then you’d have to read the sequel, New Moon ).
P.S. Here is the official website of Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series.
P.P.S. I heard and read that the series become worse and worse. Apparently Bella tries to kill herself to see Edward, Edward tries to kill himself thinking that she died, they marry, Bella gets her wish and becomes a vampire, and Jacob the werewolf falls in love with Bella and Edward’s baby?! π€’
I’m not going to read the sequels… but the covers are quite aesthetic:
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Obsessive vampire romance is absorbing and fun. Read Common Sense Media's Twilight: The Twilight Saga, Book 1 review, age rating, and parents guide.
Among its many accolades, Twilight was named an "ALA Top Ten Books for Young Adults," an Amazon.com "Best Book of the Decade So Far," and a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year. Meyer graduated from Brigham Young University with a degree in English Literature.
Bella enrolls in the high school and makes some new acquaintances. While sitting with them in the cafeteria, she spots a group of five strange and incredibly beautiful people and learns that they are the Cullens.
When Bella Swan shows up in the small town of Forks, her plan is to endure high school for two years and get out. Instead, she discovers that vampires are real and not a nightmare. One of those vampires craves her blood above all others. Everything has both pros and cons. However, when it comes to Twilight, I just hear the bad.
Read Twilight: The Twilight Saga, Book 1 reviews from parents on Common Sense Media. Become a member to write your own review.
The book Twilight is about a seventeen year old girl named Bella who moves to a small rainy town called Forks, to live with her dad. Bella’s life is pretty ordinary, gloomy, but still ordinary, until she meets a strange boy named Edward.
Synopsis of Twilight: After moving in with her father in the small town of Forks, Washington, Isabella "Bella" Swan falls for the mysterious Edward Cullen. Bella soon finds out that things aren't quite what they seem.
Review of Twilght by Stephenie Meyer. Twilight is the story of Edward and Bella's romance. Forget any vampire romance you have read before, Twilight is so unique it is almost like it's in its own genre.
It's a much better book for young readers with better role models and less romanticizing of creepy/abusive/unhealthy relationships, more varied character types, lots of reference to classic literature and poetry to encourage branching out in your reading, and much better writing in general than Twilight.
Twilight is a problematic teen romance novel about a stupid human girl and her creepy vampire boyfriend who she can’t live without. I would recommend Twilight if you… are an upcoming author who wants to write the next bestselling teen romance novel like Stephenie Meyer.