Is it because of Edward’s ice-cold penis? (How does it feel to make love to a guy who is as cold as ice anyway?) Is it because Bella is just so special that rules laid down by the author don’t apply to her? There is a long-winded explanation on the official website of the author that unfortunately tells me that Ms Meyer hadn’t been paying attention in biology class. Any halfway decent author should know that, after building up her canon in three books, she should not break the rules she herself has set down, not without giving any good reason as to why these rules need to be broken.Īnd rules are indeed broken when Bella Swan gets knocked up by Edward after they get married. In Breaking Dawn, it is pretty clear that Stephenie Meyer isn’t just a repetitive author who spends 600 plus pages in a book waxing endlessly over the stone-hard ice-cold hot body of her favorite vampire Edward Cullen via her proxy Bella Swan, she is also a terrible plotter. If you read this book without having read the previous three books in this series, only you will know your reason for doing so, as this book is the conclusion of the entire series. Megan Tingley Books, $12.99, ISBN 978-4-8īreaking Dawn is the conclusion to Stephenie Meyer’s Bella & Edward: Mary Sue Pornography for Little Girls series.
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