Saturday, March 21, 2009

Breaking Dawn

How often do we really get to experience true divine love? Do many people in our society today even know what true love is? In the book, Breaking Dawn, Stephanie Meyer introduces true love in a way that’s never been displayed before. This is one of my favorite books because not only does it display love between a couple, but many other types of love. When people hear the words true love, most people automatically assume it is love between a man and a woman or love between spouses. But in the book Breaking Dawn, the author introduces true love in all shapes and forms. Bella, an eighteen year old, is in love with her vampire boyfriend Edward Cullen. The two lovers make a pact for marriage for a real honeymoon and Bella’s transformation. Miraculously Bella ends up being pregnant, which has never been heard of in the vampire world. A vampire impregnating a human? The baby eventually is taken out from her and she nearly survives with the venom of Edward spurting straight into her heart to save her. After the conversion they are faced with the Volturi, which is a royal and very powerful vampire family from Italy, who are coming to destroy the immortal child of theirs. On the verge of losing their lives and love ones, Edward and Bella go through great efforts to prove that their child is not an immortal child, but half human and half vampire. Immortal children immediately called to be destroyed because being children they will always harm humans staying at their children stage and risk the vampire’s secrecy to the public. Edward and Bella go to the fullest instinct to ensure their not only their family’s safety, but their love ones too. Through it all, Jacob a werewolf and faithful friend, proves his love for Bella, Edward and their daughter Renesmee by standing by to fight the Volturi when it came to it. To the Volturi’s surprise they are faced with a coven that has finally met their match and faced with werewolves, they are forced to see the truth. They find that the immortal child is in fact a half breed which means she would cause no harm to humans. In a review from Love Vampires, they note that “The romantic tension between Edward and Bella is non-existent – it is clear that whatever happens to them (death, Jacob, mutant vampire baby) their love is non-negotiable and to a certain extent this alters the feel of the story, losing some of the romantic magic of Twilight in the process. If beginnings are tricky, endings are fraught with difficulties. At the beginning readers have no expectations but by the end everyone seems to have an opinion on how they would have finished the book if they were writing it. Thankfully Stephenie Meyer was writing the ending so the resulting story is a good one and in my opinion a fitting end to this fantastic series. The strength of Stephenie Meyer’s writing as ever lies in her exploration of love in its many guises and Breaking Dawn gives her the opportunity to examine the relationships between mother and child, father and daughter, husband and wife and the bonds of friendship.”

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