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Anyone ELSE ABSOLUTLEY HATE TWILIGHT?
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<blockquote data-quote="Unregistered" data-source="post: 1680357"><p><strong>Feel free to discuss this <img src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f642.png" class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" width="64" height="64" alt="(:" title="Smile (:" data-smilie="1"data-shortname="(:" /></strong></p><p></p><p>The poster is right in some sense. </p><p>Despite being 15 years old [poster's cliche age] I have read this novel. It's not the love for Edward Cullen that captures me it's the skill that Meyers has to keep someone reading into the novel with such lust and excitement despite her giving the whole plot away in the blurb, no matter of their age. </p><p>I don't read this novel in the way poster is suggesting ''to find a perfect man' but for the sheer romance of this literature.</p><p>Poster is right in the sense that some people have become obsessed and over the top about the novel and I put the blame for that purely on the film, alot of people are only reading the novel becuase they watched the film and that is absurd. To enjoy any novel you can't of watched the films. No matter how good the films are, they are always different to the novel and therefore put a different perspective on the novel for the reader.</p><p>I agree that the obscure idea of a vampire with a hidden secret falls in love blah blah is a bit cheesy, but again, without repeating myself, it's Meyers skills to capture and control her audience with the characters of the novel. I also agree, that the other novels she mentioned are great literature and are most certainly not spoken about as much as they should be.</p><p>This is not me saying that this novel is great literature, it is merely me pointing out that it is not BAD literature, and Meyers skill [like many other authors] to capture an audience is worthy of recognition. </p><p></p><p>Please feel free to discuss this with me, email me 'jessiilou@hotmail.co.uk'</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Unregistered, post: 1680357"] [b]Feel free to discuss this (:[/b] The poster is right in some sense. Despite being 15 years old [poster's cliche age] I have read this novel. It's not the love for Edward Cullen that captures me it's the skill that Meyers has to keep someone reading into the novel with such lust and excitement despite her giving the whole plot away in the blurb, no matter of their age. I don't read this novel in the way poster is suggesting ''to find a perfect man' but for the sheer romance of this literature. Poster is right in the sense that some people have become obsessed and over the top about the novel and I put the blame for that purely on the film, alot of people are only reading the novel becuase they watched the film and that is absurd. To enjoy any novel you can't of watched the films. No matter how good the films are, they are always different to the novel and therefore put a different perspective on the novel for the reader. I agree that the obscure idea of a vampire with a hidden secret falls in love blah blah is a bit cheesy, but again, without repeating myself, it's Meyers skills to capture and control her audience with the characters of the novel. I also agree, that the other novels she mentioned are great literature and are most certainly not spoken about as much as they should be. This is not me saying that this novel is great literature, it is merely me pointing out that it is not BAD literature, and Meyers skill [like many other authors] to capture an audience is worthy of recognition. Please feel free to discuss this with me, email me 'jessiilou@hotmail.co.uk' [/QUOTE]
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