Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga)
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Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga)

by

Stephenie Meyer

(Author)

4.7

-

26,532 ratings


In the explosive finale to the epic romantic saga, Bella has one final choice to make. Should she stay mortal and strengthen her connection to the werewolves, or leave it all behind to become a vampire? When you loved the one who was killing you, it left you no options. How could you run, how could you fight, when doing so would hurt that beloved one? If your life was all you had to give, how could you not give it? If it was someone you truly loved? To be irrevocably in love with a vampire is both fantasy and nightmare woven into a dangerously heightened reality for Bella Swan. Pulled in one direction by her intense passion for Edward Cullen, and in another by her profound connection to werewolf Jacob Black, a tumultuous year of temptation, loss, and strife have led her to the ultimate turning point. Her imminent choice to either join the dark but seductive world of immortals or to pursue a fully human life has become the thread from which the fates of two tribes hangs. This astonishing, breathlessly anticipated conclusion to the Twilight Saga illuminates the secrets and mysteries of this spellbinding romantic epic. It's here! #1 bestselling author Stephenie Meyer makes a triumphant return to the world of Twilight with the highly anticipated companion, Midnight Sun: the iconic love story of Bella and Edward told from the vampire's point of view. "People do not want to just read Meyer's books; they want to climb inside them and live there." -- Time "A literary phenomenon." -- The New York Times

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ISBN-10

0316328324

ISBN-13

978-0316328326

Print length

656 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Publication date

January 31, 2022

Dimensions

5.6 x 2.05 x 8.25 inches

Item weight

1.25 pounds



Popular Highlights in this book

  • And then we continued blissfully into this small but perfect piece of our forever.

    Highlighted by 3,466 Kindle readers

  • I had found my true place in the world, the place I fit, the place I shined.

    Highlighted by 3,328 Kindle readers

  • It made no sense when he looked at me that way. Like I was the prize rather than the outrageously lucky winner.

    Highlighted by 3,047 Kindle readers


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ASIN :

B0015DYIH2

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1459 KB

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Editorial Reviews

Praise for TWILIGHT:

  • A New York Times Editor's Choice
  • A Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year
  • An Amazon Best Book of the Decade
  • An American Library Association Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults

Sample

1. ENGAGED

NO ONE IS STARING AT YOU, I PROMISED MYSELF. NO ONE IS STARING at you. No one is staring at you.

But, because I couldn’t lie convincingly even to myself, I had to check.

As I sat waiting for one of the three traffic lights in town to turn green, I peeked to the right—in her minivan, Mrs. Weber had turned her whole torso in my direction. Her eyes bored into mine, and I flinched back, wondering why she didn’t drop her gaze or look ashamed. It was still considered rude to stare at people, wasn’t it? Didn’t that apply to me anymore?

Then I remembered that these windows were so darkly tinted that she probably had no idea if it was even me in here, let alone that I’d caught her looking. I tried to take some comfort in the fact that she wasn’t really staring at me, just the car.

My car. Sigh.

I glanced to the left and groaned. Two pedestrians were frozen on the sidewalk, missing their chance to cross as they stared. Behind them, Mr. Marshall was gawking through the plate-glass window of his little souvenir shop. At least he didn’t have his nose pressed up against the glass. Yet.

The light turned green and, in my hurry to escape, I stomped on the gas pedal without thinking—the normal way I would have punched it to get my ancient Chevy truck moving.

Engine snarling like a hunting panther, the car jolted forward so fast that my body slammed into the black leather seat and my stomach flattened against my spine.

“Arg!” I gasped as I fumbled for the brake. Keeping my head, I merely tapped the pedal. The car lurched to an absolute standstill anyway.

I couldn’t bear to look around at the reaction. If there had been any doubt as to who was driving this car before, it was gone now. With the toe of my shoe, I gently nudged the gas pedal down one half millimeter, and the car shot forward again.

I managed to reach my goal, the gas station. If I hadn’t been running on vapors, I wouldn’t have come into town at all. I was going without a lot of things these days, like Pop-Tarts and shoelaces, to avoid spending time in public.

Moving as if I were in a race, I got the hatch open, the cap off, the card scanned, and the nozzle in the tank within seconds. Of course, there was nothing I could do to make the numbers on the gauge pick up the pace. They ticked by sluggishly, almost as if they were doing it just to annoy me.

It wasn’t bright out—a typical drizzly day in Forks, Washington—but I still felt like a spotlight was trained on me, drawing attention to the delicate ring on my left hand. At times like this, sensing the eyes on my back, it felt as if the ring were pulsing like a neon sign: Look at me, look at me.

It was stupid to be so self-conscious, and I knew that. Besides my dad and mom, did it really matter what people were saying about my engagement? About my new car? About my mysterious acceptance into an Ivy League college? About the shiny black credit card that felt red-hot in my back pocket right now? “Yeah, who cares what they think,” I muttered under my breath.

“Um, miss?” a man’s voice called.

I turned, and then wished I hadn’t.

Two men stood beside a fancy SUV with brand-new kayaks tied to the top. Neither of them was looking at me; they both were staring at the car. Personally, I didn’t get it. But then, I was just proud I could distinguish between the symbols for Toyota, Ford, and Chevy. This car was glossy black, sleek, and pretty, but it was still just a car to me.

“I’m sorry to bother you, but could you tell me what kind of car you’re driving?” the tall one asked.

“Um, a Mercedes, right?”

“Yes,” the man said politely while his shorter friend rolled his eyes at my answer. “I know. But I was wondering, is that… are you driving a Mercedes Guardian?” The man said the name with reverence. I had a feeling this guy would get along well with Edward Cullen, my… my fiancé (there really was no getting around that truth with the wedding just days away). “They aren’t supposed to be available in Europe yet,” the man went on, “let alone here.”

While his eyes traced the contours of my car—it didn’t look much different from any other Mercedes sedan to me, but what did I know?—I briefly contemplated my issues with words like fiancé, wedding, husband, etc.

I just couldn’t put it together in my head.

On the one hand, I had been raised to cringe at the very thought of poofy white dresses and bouquets. But more than that, I just couldn’t reconcile a staid, respectable, dull concept like husband with my concept of Edward. It was like casting an archangel as an accountant; I couldn’t visualize him in any commonplace role.

Like always, as soon as I started thinking about Edward I was caught up in a dizzy spin of fantasies. The stranger had to clear his throat to get my attention; he was still waiting for an answer about the car’s make and model.

“I don’t know,” I told him honestly.

“Do you mind if I take a picture with it?”

It took me a second to process that. “Really? You want to take a picture with the car?”

“Sure—nobody is going to believe me if I don’t get proof.”

“Um. Okay. Fine.”

I swiftly put away the nozzle and crept into the front seat to hide while the enthusiast dug a huge professional-looking camera out of his backpack. He and his friend took turns posing by the hood, and then they went to take pictures at the back end.

“I miss my truck,” I whimpered to myself.

Very, very convenient—too convenient—that my truck would wheeze its last wheeze just weeks after Edward and I had agreed to our lopsided compromise, one detail of which was that he be allowed to replace my truck when it passed on. Edward swore it was only to be expected; my truck had lived a long, full life and then expired of natural causes. According to him. And, of course, I had no way to verify his story or to try to raise my truck from the dead on my own. My favorite mechanic—

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About the authors

Stephenie Meyer

Stephenie Meyer

Stephenie Meyer's life changed dramatically on June 2, 2003. The stay-at-home mother of three young sons woke-up from a dream featuring seemingly real characters that she could not get out of her head. "Though I had a million things to do (i.e. making breakfast for hungry children, dressing and changing the diapers of said children, finding the swimsuits that no one ever puts away in the right place), I stayed in bed, thinking about the dream. Unwillingly, I eventually got up and did the immediate necessities, and then put everything that I possibly could on the back burner and sat down at the computer to write--something I hadn't done in so long that I wondered why I was bothering." Meyer invented the plot during the day through swim lessons and potty training, then writing it out late at night when the house was quiet. Three months later she finished her first novel, Twilight.

Twilight was one of 2005's most talked about novels and within weeks of its release the book debuted at #5 on The New York Times bestseller list.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. The movie version of Twilight will be released by Summit Entertainment nationwide on November 21, 2008, starring Kristen Stewart ("Into The Wild") and Robert Pattinson ("Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire").

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Reviews

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5

26,532 global ratings

Foger

Foger

5

Best of series by far.

Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2011

Verified Purchase

Book four of the Twilight series. A teen paranormal romance. Bella, a young ordinary human girl falls in love with Edward a vampire.

First. This series completly changed how I view vampires. It's not all about evil and blood with Meyers. This series opened me up to teen fiction which is now my favorite reading material. This series also opened me up to shapeshifters, and lots of YA material. Even Faeries and Mermaid books. I'm over 35 and always check the YA sections first now. I actually saw parts of the Twilight movie before reading this and loved it, then started the series. Bella the clumsy human many readers bash, actually ends the first three books being brave, and possible hero material. I won't spoil how this one ends.

Now on Breaking Dawn. This book is artwork and probably the best book I have ever read. When I run out of new books, I often return and end up reading breaking dawn again. I don't know how many times I've read it. The book is three parts. Very long parts, 760 pages, so if you like the series you get a great deal on this. Two books for the price of one. The three parts are first person views switching from Bella to Jacob.

Part one begins with a beautiful wedding and honeymoon. Then tragedy strikes and we're taken into part two from Jacob's perspective.

Breaking Dawn is a page turner you will not be able to put down. It's writing at it's finest. While the series has been bashed for being poorly edited, we see near perfection here. We see huge scale progression from the characters. We see the conclusion to a romance triangle that has kept us guessing since book two. We see nearly every question from the series answered here. We get a lot more of the Cullens, and even a close look inside the pack mind. We get more character dialogue than any book in the series, and maybe more than the rest put together. This is a series you can read over and over, but if your like me, you'll find yourself reading Breaking Dawn the most.

I spent a lot of time reading over the negative post on this book and actually rewrote mine to answer them. I read through several pages of post and will answer each one I can remember here. And that's the point. Every single complaint this book gets can be explained. The only real problems to this book, are a unfinished ending, and it's a bit of a fairytale completion to the series. About ten problems the series has had are answered perfectly in Breaking Dawn. Each one makes sense and can be explained, but taken as a whole. Ten happy endings might be too much of a fairytale. Not to me. I love happy endings. Keep in mind this is a laid back and relaxing series. Intended for teenagers, but excellent for all ages. Yes even retired people.

SPOILERS Answers to complaints about the series.

Charlie doesn't put up enough fight for the wedding.---- What more could Charlie do? Disinherit her? He's been against Edward since the end of book two and seen it does no good. He accepts it hopes Renee can do more.

Charlie should ask more questions after Bella is sick--- Maybe a few, but not many. Remember Jacob has just shown him he's a werewolf and told him if he can't handle to wierdness Bella will leave. Any parent who loves their daughtar would play along. The only other option is to loose her.

Bella turns out graceful--- All vampires are graceful. Alice seems to be more so.

Bella shouldn't be married at eighteen--- There is nothing wrong with marriage or children at eighteen. If you can love, afford, and have time for your child, it's actually better to start early. It gives you more years with your kid. Would you rather be thirty-five or fifty when your kids eighteen?

Bella gets to skip being a newborn. No one else has. Bella should have killed people---- Carlisle, and Rosalie never drank human blood either. Edward avoided killing anyone for ten years after her was a newborn. He killed bad people when he went off on his own. Carlisle was tempted and probably the others as well. Carlisle woke up inside a city and ran off as a newborn. Bella's prepared. She's the only vampire the Cullens know who's chosen the life as a vegitarian beforehand. None of the other Cullens were expecting to become vampires. Meyer gives us hints in book three by saying at least four times "It will be interesting to see how Bella turns out since she's prepared."

Bella can't get pregnant! It's impossible! Vampires are frozen and can't reproduce.---- Meyers never says male vampires can't father a baby. She even gives evidence to say they can in BD page 125-26. She says female vamps can't change enough to carry the baby, but males need to change very little to father a baby. As long as Meyer doesn't contradict a baby being possible, then the baby is fine. What gets me is how can readers believe in vampires in the first place and question a vampire baby? They believe in vampires, werewolves, arms that can move without being attached to a body. They read three books of paranormal and question the fourth book because of a pregnacy they didn't suspect.

Bella gets all these rewards and pays nothing---- How much do you want her to pay? I think she paid too much through the series and again here. She's tortured a little by James. Edward ditches her and she nearly goes insane. She saves Edwards life and get grounded for it. She has to hurt Jacob when she gets Edward back. She has to live knowing all of those people in Seattle are dead because of her. She has to run to Rosalie for help since her loving husband cares nothing about what she wants. She carries a baby that has a fity percent chance to kill her. She suffers three days in agony. No. Bella is like the most forgiving girl on the planet and deserves everything she got.

The wolves conflict ended too easily. Someone should have got hurt---- Honesty did anyone expect the wolves and Cullens to end up as enemies when the series ended? Hasn't that been one of Bella's side plots to get them to get along? Remember the magnets? The whole wolf conflict was based on the word abomination. Meyer wrote this scenario beautifully to make perfect sense the wolves would halt the attack after loosing three of their own. Not to mention abomination is a weak excuse to murder in the first place.

The imprinting is wrong and fixed Jacob's problem too easily----- Meyer is clear it's not wrong. It's very similar to people promising their children away at birth. Even religious people did this a hundred years ago. If it offends you, why didn't you complain after book three? There was a two year old baby then too. I don't think it fixed Jacob too easily. Again we were prepared in book three, and Jacob has suffered enough too.

Their should have been a fight at the end!--- I agree. Meyer totally messed up the ending with the Volturi. But, she had small reasons for this as well. Most of Carlisle's witnesses were there to defend only. Even the fighters. Even though the Volturi attacked first, could gentle Carlisle say charge? The Volturi backed off first so if the Cullens had attacked, it would have been a small form of murder. That's a very small reason, and I agree the ending is totally messed up. Meyer had no reason to end the series this way other than to write us another. Which I hope she does.

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2 people found this helpful

Judith

Judith

5

How bad can the writing be when you can't put the book down?

Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2012

Verified Purchase

This review applies to the Kindle version of the book, purchased through Amazon. This review contains SPOILERS, so if you don't want to know the ending, don't read it. I have to admit that I never read the other books; just watched the movies. I was curious to read the end as I felt that Breaking Dawn 1 didn't end in the right way (Avatar anyone?) However, curiously, when Bella opens her eyes in the book, it was the exact center of the book. I was an English teacher and promoted as an attorney because I was the best writer in my government unit. I did not find the writing terrible, especially as I read the entire book in one night - couldn't put it down. To me, that is good writing. I have a sneaky suspicion that I wouldn't have liked the earlier books. As for "fading to black", this generation has no appreciation of the power of fade to black. Who wants to read all the details of someone else's sexual experience. I think there was plenty of information on the sex as a vampire. In Stephanie Myer's world, becoming a vampire cures all ills, so why not clumsiness too? Of course, her world has nothing to do with the traditional vampire and werewolf legends, the one thing about the series that I didn't like.

What the nay saying reviewers didn't like was, in part, what I did like. I really didn't need to read a full description of a dress. I have an imagination and like to use it. The one thing I agree with is the lack of any anger, disappointment or trying to talk an 18 year old out of getting married. However, as I was married at 19, without too much angst from my parents, it didn't seem as strange to me as it might otherwise have been. Also, Bella is definitely painted as quite obstinate and her father probably knew it was no use so why ruin her day?

The way Stephanie gushes over how beautiful Bella is when human, the transition to vampire beautiful really isn't all that much - no more zits, discoloration of skin, dark circles under eyes, etc. I'll bet that vampirism would actually cure a double chin, but Bella didn't have one as a human. As a woman, I know that there are times I look awful and times I look spectacular. I suppose if I turned into a Stephanie Myers vampire, it would be the spectacular that showed all the time. Also, apparently, there is a glow to the sparkly skin she created for her vampires. I also know that when a woman is graceful, it affects the entire way she looks and is perceived. So, when turned gets rid of your clumsiness and you before graceful, that affects your look as well. A lack of specified description of Bella (other than beautiful) lets the reader use his or her imagination.

You younger generation need to learn that sometimes what isn't spelled out is better than seeing or reading every little detail. Your imagination brain cells have atrophied. You no longer think imagining is a good thing. Watch Casablanca - it's in black and white - and see how affective a movie with no screen sex but plenty of passion is.

Now to the final point - everyone gets what they want and no one has to suffer to get it. Did you not read the part about Bella's suffering that didn't show because of the morphine? Even the movie tried to pick up on that. Apparently, Bella suffered quite a bit to become a vampire. Then she wasn't allowed to see the baby she nearly died for until everyone else said it was ok. Especially as she is described as the strongest of the clan, if I were Bella, I'd have thrown everyone into walls to hold my own child. I can't imagine that even Stephanie's newborns would drink the blood of their own children or parents. Remember, newborns are strong because some human blood remains. Apparently, in Bella's case, some humanity remained as well. Perhaps this was because she spent so much time with Carlisle. How easy did you you think it was for Bella to turn her back on the hikers while hunting? Part of why she was able to do it was because they might have been someone she knew. If she could do that, do you think that she would want to feed on her own child? What if someone put your favorite food close enough to you so that you could smell it, but you knew you had to eat tofu. Could you easily turn from one to the other? These are subtleties that I think the younger generation just doesn't get. Vampires are not supposed to get tired, but Bella had to concentrate so hard in training with her shield that she was exhausted (until she actually got it). Have you ever had to work at something so hard that it gave you a headache or made your body tired? And, even when she "got it", how easy do you think it was for Bella to shield an entire army while facing the Volturri? This is a woman who barely had time to enjoy all the pleasures of her change when she had to abandon them to prepare for a fight? How easy was that? Furthermore, all you males and childless females out there, how easy do you think it is for a mother to prepare to send her child away to keep her safe, especially when she had had such a short time to enjoy the child?

These are not being burned at the stake or losing Edward prices she had to pay, but they were difficult, subtle, pains that hurt almost as much. There was also the pain of thinking Alice was gone for good when Alice was her best friend in the family? Imagine seeing Rosalie, whom you knew wanted to keep the child as her own, was always allowed to hold the child before Bella could? Imagine having the greatest sex in the world and the ability to never get physically tired, but you had to stop to take care of your child. At least at night the child fell asleep so you could go back to sex without feeling you were neglecting her (although the book does describe the mesmerizing feature of Renesmee - that you could watch her sleep for a long long time).

While Bella didn't have to give up Charlie, it's made clear in the book that he would love her no matter what her circumstances were, but just wasn't ready yet to have more than Jacob's transformation ability to deal with. After all, he had dealt with Edward, Carlisle, and Alice in earlier books. And he did rebel when he said "no more lies" because he knew the child wasn't adopted but was Bella's. OK, it might have been interesting if Renesmee tried her hand on your face communication trick on Charlie, but he might have dropped her. It is true that Renesmee's understanding of when she could do things and when she couldn't (and why she couldn't have human blood) is a little out there; but then Stephanie's entire concept of the vampire and werewolf world's drives me crazy, especially as the vampire in love with a human and living in a human world was done so much better by the tv series Forever Knight. If you have never seen this series, rent it or buy it and see how it can be done and still stay true to the real vampire legends. But if you are going to accept Stephanie's world, which you apparently have if you've read the earlier books, then the final book makes perfect sense.

Without having read the earlier books, my thought is that Stephanie Myers grew as a writer rather than the other way around. I look forward to seeing how the screenplay incorporates all of the action and subtleties of the end of this book.

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9 people found this helpful

N. D. Winsor

N. D. Winsor

5

Breaking Dawn: an opinion in 10 parts

Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2008

Verified Purchase

Spoilers Inside

I highly anticipated this book (probably most people who have posted reviews did as well). The book brought on several emotions for me which I will break down in detail. I will not recount the entire plot of the novel, only key points to make comments on.

  1. The wedding - the wedding was beautiful and I was glad to see that Bella finally saw her human self as being beautiful. It was nice to see Jacob back, but he did ruin the mood once Bella mentioned the honeymoon and that angered me. The wedding and reception were shorter than I would have like it to be, but there were more important story lines to explore.

  2. The honeymoon (part 1)- I thought Meyer did a fabulous job of conveying Edward and Bella's intimacy without being smutty. She reinforced the sanctity of marriage before sex which I believe is a fabulous message to young readers.

  3. The honeymoon (part 2) - I was livid once I realized that Bella was pregnant; and, honestly, it was obvious that Meyer would go in that direction from all of the foreshadowing in Eclipse and in Bella's nightmares. I was horrified that a. Bella wanted to keep the baby and b. she ran to Rosalie for help. I could not refer to the baby as such, instead I deemed it vampire spawn. I felt that Edward was a blubbering idiot during this section and I wanted to smack both him and Bella and tell them to pull it together.

  4. Jacob's section - I was so extremely angry and frustrated with Bella that Jacob's voice was immediately refreshing. His quips between him and Rosalie kept the mood light when everything else was not. I love that he matured in this section and was not the egotistical idiot that I once deemed him to be. I rooted for him as he took charge and took what was rightfully his - his postion as Alpha. I do admit that the imprintation on Renesmee was a complete and utter shock to me. Given the circumstances it is strange, but it also made complete sense. By incorporating the imprinting on Renesmee into the storyline, it opened up the communication between the wolf packs, allowed for peace to finally come between Jacob and Edward, and created a solid alliance between the wolves and the vampires. As for those who believe that this imprintation promotes pedophilia, I believe that they are misunderstanding the delicate balance and nature of the situation. Yes, Renesmee is just a baby, but no, Jacob is not thinking of her in a romantic or sexual nature. Jacob is first and foremost a guardian and a soulmate. He is not rushing her to grow up, but encouraging her to enjoy her childhood. Jacob will remain a teenager until he decides to give up his shape-shifting ways. Renesmee will become a full grown adult in just seven years and then they can live their happily ever after. For now, he is more a body guard and friend than a lover.

  5. Bella- Not exactly the transformation she had in mind, but her tranformation took place because it needed to and not only because she wanted it. It was nice to Bella finally believe in herself and not rely on others. I really felt that Nessie and Bella's relationship was not as close of a bond as it should be. I also felt that Edward seemed somewhat detached from Nessie, and not very fatherly. I was relieved that she did not have to hide from Charlie and that he was somewhat in on their secret life, but I couldn't help but think - what about Renee? She is barely mentioned beyond the wedding. Poor Renee. I was, however, extremely excited to finally see Bella hold her own and become a stronger character once she transformed. I thought her power was amazing and for once she was the one who saved the day.

  6. Renesmee - What an awful name. I get that it's a combination of Renee and Esme, but it's still hideous. I hope that fans do not become inspired to name their daughters after her. I did not want Nessie (a name even worse than Renesmee) to be born. I thought she would be an evil spawn that would destroy the characters I have known and loved. Once she was introduced, I, like the characters in the book, melted. How could you not love her? Yes, the Jacob imprinting was weird, but it gave Jacob a purpose in life and created an improved alliance with the Cullens and a reconciliation with his own pack. She was the key to pulling together the vampire clans to prevent the destructions of the Cullens. I really would like to learn more about her character and to see her grow...a Meyer spin-off perhaps?

  7. Alice's role- I was aggravated that Alice did not have a voice throughout most of this book. I enjoy Alice's character and thought that she really did not have much purpose in this novel. I was extremely angry when she and Jasper left, but I had a feeling they would be back. Alice quickly redeemed herself in the final chapters, but I still hold a slight grudge.

  8. The vampire clans - It was extremely interesting to meet the characters that had been mentioned previously but not introduced. With their help, Bella was able to become the strongest weapon in the group - for the first time. I thought the scene with the Volturi would have turned more violent and found myself somewhat disappointed that it did not turn into a showdown, but I was happy with the end result.

  9. The happily ever after - Yes, this story had a happy ending. Did anyone remember that Stephenie Meyer's favorite author is Jane Austen? Austen was also a firm believer in her characters getting whatever they desired. Meyer's ending was no different. The characters had conflict in all the books, but it was resolved. Any conflict, no matter how large it may seem can be resolved. Yes, everything worked out conveniently well and there is no longer discord. The overwhelming theme was not that you do not have to make choices in life because everything will work out for the best, but rather, love does conquer all. It is a universal theme - with love anything can be and is possible - isn't that a lesson we can all agree on? Instead of a bloody war torn ending, there was a peaceful resolution - we can only dream of this happening more in real life. Yes, everything worked out for our beloved characters. What else was to be expected? This was a fantasy, no, I'm wrong - this was a FAIRY TALE! How could a reader not expect all the pieces of the puzzle to fit together when all along it seemed like a fairy tale - the knight in shining armor, the damsel in distress, the evil Volturi...(Meyer makes several allusions to literary fairy tales). Readers need to remember that this is not a work of nonfiction. It is not a work of realistic fiction. It is a fairy tale and everyone got their happily ever after.

  10. I am going to miss these books and these characters. May they live forever on library shelfs and in the minds of their truly devoted fans. Bring on Midnight Sun!

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78 people found this helpful

RoyBoy and LuLu's mommy

RoyBoy and LuLu's mommy

5

It is what it is...the final chapter of an author's vision...

Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2008

Verified Purchase

People, it's juvenile fiction. I didn't have a way that I had envisioned for it to all work out. I've had a true best friend of the opposite sex, been in love with my soul mate, had children... and to me, all the plots, story lines and character developments were not THAT unbelievable. It basically just depends on your point of view and you personal life experiences. It's all subjective.

I liked the first three books, thought the characters were interesting and engaging and I wanted to see the author's vision for how their story ends (or continues indefinitely...or whatever). It's not my book. I didn't write it. I don't wish that I could change aspects of the book to fit what I would have preferred. It is what it is...the final chapter of an author's vision.

To have a child with your soul mate is an unbelievable occurrence. It's life changing. Period. You no longer are the same person. You ARE a protector. Everyday, even in mundane tasks. OK, Bella changed. She grew and matured, much faster than she normally would have had to with all the supernatural catalysts in her life. I expected it. Rejoiced in it with her. I was happy for her in the end. Even with the maturation of her character, she was always considered "special." The first three books gave us this insight with her natural ability to shield her mind from supernatural powers and the enormous capacity for love, regardless of circumstances (Edward, Jacob, etc.) There's been a lot of flack about this natural extension into her immortal life via the "love shield" as some would call it, but it's really a logical and natural extension of Bella herself...It would seem illogical and too convenient to me if it hadn't been such a deeply rooted theme regarding her character in the first books.

I dunno, I guess I don't get all the intense criticism.

To say that she got it all without sacrificing anything is laughable. Bella, as the heroine, went through a lot. Either she was battered, bruised and fighting for her life or she was so emotionally torn up (and not just for Edward...), she couldn't function. In every book she faced (and barely escaped) near death experiences. There were two in this book with the pregnancy/immortality and the Volturi. I'm confused; did people not want her to survive somewhat unscathed? I thought that was the point of a good love story/soap opera. You endure a lot for your happily ever after.

The whole thing about marriage at age 18 was a sacrifice for her. It's not what she wanted. It was a concession for her. She didn't really want kids, but when faced with the real alternative of a child growing in her womb, she changed. Nothing wrong with that. I thought that was very realistic.

Bella never wanted to be taken care of. Another concession on her behalf. Ok, he's rich, but what hero in a fantasy love story isn't? I would have found it more unbelievable if he had lived a century and hadn't found a way to acquire wealth. If she gripes in the beginning, she will have lots of time to get over it and deal with it. Also believable.

I really didn't want to hear full details about Edward and Bella's sex life. The innuendos were enough for me and perfect for general young adult fiction.

To me, the book sends a message that young love, marriage and sexual intercourse come with heavy consequences, BUT if you can work through the issues, it can work out in the end. But again, it may not be the best choice. I may be alone in this, but being severely bruised up during sex, getting violently ill and turning up pregnant unexpectedly, and having the baby tear your body up from the inside out does NOT paint a pretty picture of early marriage, intercourse and the birthing experience. Not to mention the myriad of issues the actual baby caused once born. If I was a teen, I would be like "Dag...I thought it was going to be so different, like sunshine and roses once she got married to her true love, turned into a vampire and had a baby..." Yeah, it turned out great in the end, but not before a lot of physical pain and mental anguish. Just like life can sometimes be. Again, I thought this was pretty realistic.

I thought Edward was doing what he thought he had to in order to preserve Bella's life that hung so precariously in the world of nearly indestructible immortals. When he had to, he offered her choices within the boundaries that would still keep her safe. She wasn't immortal. She needed help and protection to stay alive. If he was so controlling and manipulative, he would not have gone along with her wishes to have the baby. Most times he felt helpless.

I'm glad Jacob found his true soul mate. I'm glad that it happened to be Bella's daughter. The biological aspects of imprinting to me dismissed the notion that Nessie was Jacob's second choice. Imprinting goes above and beyond the human notion of love as demonstrated by Leah and Sam. Yes, Nessie is an extension of Bella, but he imprinted with her because it was their destiny. He still loves Bella, but it pales in comparison (much like what Bella may have felt for Jacob while with Edward). His focus is now the child, but again he obviously still cares for and loves Bella. It's convenient, I know, but it works for me. Not implausible.

Sheeesh. The characters in the story went through an awful lot to get to where they ended up in the end. Everyone struggled and everyone sacrificed. Physically, but most importantly, emotionally. Everyone. No one escaped unscathed in some way. To me, this made the ending all that much more satisfying.

This book is still all about choice and sacrifice. Not only of the central characters, but of peripheral characters (vampires, wolves AND humans) some newly introduced in this book. EVERYONE had choices to make, central to their survival. Some were easier than others, but still all made choices.

I hadn't planned to write this much, but the thoughts came easily, so I did...

Again, I think it's subjective. Many people have strong feelings about the characters and how they believe the story should end.

Read it for yourself and decide. I'd also recommend reading the first three in succession before you read this one. I did. I was surprised at the elements I missed the first time around or had forgotten about. The story felt more like a natural continuation and I relied on printed words to fuel my thoughts about the book rather my somewhat distorted memory of the first three.

I am an eternal optimist. I love the underlying theme of hope. You may struggle fiercely through the night, but joy will (and SHOULD) come in the morning. The title was extremely appropriate...

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Alexandra Edholm

Alexandra Edholm

4

Not what i expected at all....but it was still great.

Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2008

Verified Purchase

Okay first let me start out by saying that i loved the other three books a lot. Twilight because the story was so different and so amazing that it drew me in, New Moon because of Bella and Edwards love that lasted even after he'd left (i didnt care for the lack of Edward for most of it though) and Eclipse because it was so emotional and so powerful. Bella had to make a choice and that just made the whole story worth reading because you wanted to help make that choice with her. So when i got my copy of breaking dawn the first book instantly pulled me in. (if you dont like spoilers stop reading)

In the first book everything with the wedding and the honeymoon was exactly what i wanted it to be up until the part when she figured out she was pregnant. Never in all the years I've been reading vampire based novels have I read one where the vampire can impregnate a human. The only story I've read that got fairly close would be blackwood farm but even that is a stretch (it's a book by Anne Rice). So that in turn threw me for a loop.

The second book was entirely from Jacob's perspective. And while i hated how New Moon centered around him i couldn't help but love his part of the book. He was disgusted by everything from the child to Rose. It was just amazing to read all the hatred and disgust in it. Even better when parts with the pack. How he finally accepted that he was an alpha and truly embraced it. It was amazing to see what a real leader he could be and it was hilarious how he acted with Seth and Leah. Just the right amount of comedy that was need at that point in the story. I was really enjoying it until i got to the end. Now when he was trying to save Bella that was perfect to me. Her best friend, the other love of her life was trying to save her and she kept fighting because of him. Until he actually felt her die and he had to get away from her. I knew he would have killed Bella's daughter...in fact i kinda hoped that he would. But instead he imprinted with her. I laughed hysterically because well that's just what would happen. It in a way was too perfect i guess. It killed a lot of that part of the book for me and at that point i honestly had no idea if i liked the story or not.

Finally the third book started once again from Bella's point of view. But i was a little hesitant to read it. Finally i dived in because at this point i knew bella was a vampire and i wanted to see what Meyer did with that. So i read on. Only to find that i was actually falling in love with the story. The fact that Bella was only 18 didn't phase me. In fact i didn't remember it till i was reading other peoples reviews. She didn't act like any 18 year old i knew. She acted a lot older. Especially with her daughter. So i continued on. The vision that Alice had didn't surprise me because i figured that Volturi were going to come back up at some point. But i didn't expect it to be like that. I also didn't expect that Bella's power was shielding. But it made sense because she always tried to shield herself as a human from so many things. Nothing about the third book really confused me. It flowed a lot like all the others and it was like reading twilight and eclipse again. Even with all the different vampire families that were introduced. Though i did share Jacobs pain and was happy to find the index in the back. The ending was amazing and i could actually see all of that happening in my head as i read it. So in the end i was totally in love with story.

The Fact that this book is receiving so many bad reviews doesn't really surprise me. People frown on things that aren't what they expected. Look at Spider man 3. People hated how it wasn't what they wanted so they bashed it while in the end it was actually a pretty good movie. This book was yes very different from the other three but what did you expect? If Meyer had only told the wedding and bella becoming a vampire we would have had a very short story on our hands and everyone would have been disappointed. Instead she added more to it. Made Bella more human to us because honestly before i always just saw her as a girl who only wanted to be just like her boyfriend. Now I finally saw her a person...as a girl...and as a woman. This book really changed how i felt about Bella. No longer did i see her as the clumsy little 18 year old girl in love with a vampire...instead i saw her as the strong, independent wife and mother. While yes a lot of people are going to be like she was only 18 when she 'settled down' but isn't that sort of the norm today? We see it so much on television and in our daily lives that it isn't that surprising anymore. So why should we bash a story just because it embraces what is going on today?

The point is this a wonderful and powerful story when you sit down and actually think about. This is exactly how the saga was always meant to end. We just never realized it before. So Kudos to you Stephenie Meyer for an amazing story and for finishing it in a way we never expected.

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