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Breaking Dawn Review

Breaking Dawn

Published: 2, August 2008
The Twilight Saga, Book 4
Genres: Children's, Contemporary, Dating & Sex, Drama, Dystopian, Family, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Magic, Paranormal, Romance, Science Fiction, School, Shape Shifter, Teen, Vampire, Werewolf, Young Adult

Check the summary of this book here:
Breaking Dawn Summary


The Review:

Breaking Dawn is the fourth installment of American novelist Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Saga. The first and third segments are presented from Bella Swan's viewpoint, while the second section is written from Jacob Black's point of view. The story picks up immediately after the events of the previous novel, Eclipse, in which Bella and Edward Cullen marry, leaving Jacob distraught. Bella gladly risks her human life and the possibility of vampire immortality when she is confronted with unexpected and life-threatening circumstances.

When I enjoyed the notion of exchanging perspectives while Bella is confined to her house and unable to accomplish much, I thought Jacob's voice was somewhat thickly in terms of utilizing distinct vocabulary to separate him from Bella, making him sound harsh and unpolished. It made me dislike his character, who had previously been one of my favorites.

The setting of Forks, which is the only location where all of the action takes place in this novel, is ideal for the unfolding drama.

The lush, verdant forests, meadows, and usually always clouded sky provide an appropriately stormy background for the novel's subsequent events.

Furthermore, because Forks is where it all began in the first book, this final novel completes the cycle.

Stephenie Meyer's solution to Edward, Bella, and Jacob's love triangle, which ran the show in the third novel, Eclipse, is simply fantastic in my opinion. It's clear proof of her inventiveness, and it neatly wraps things up.

Some have slammed it as unsettling, and I completely agree with them while yet disagreeing with them. Yes, it's out of the ordinary and completely unexpected. But that is precisely why it is so ideal.

It also allows Jacob to return to his role as Bella's closest friend, as he was in Twilight and at the start of New Moon, the second novel in the series. In other books, love triangles are frequently ended by the brutal death of one of the characters. 

Stephenie Meyer has selected a completely unique resolve, one that is nonviolent, in keeping with her overall philosophy.

Despite the fact that I am not a Twilight fan, I actually loved most of this series. Although I had been warned that the tale is bad and that what happens to the main characters is unpleasant, I still wanted to read the book without bias or preconceived beliefs, so I never listened to anybody who tried to tell me what occurred in the novel.

The tale flows along, keeping you interested enough to read it fast, but there are several flaws in it. I continued brushing aside the issues that troubled me, expecting them to be handled, wrapped up, and tied in, but they never were.

I don't know about others, but I felt cheated at the conclusion of the book because of the fictitious event that occurred, or, to put it another way, the event that never occurred.

When the unimaginable began to happen to several of the main characters, the story took a turn for the worst, I sensed something wasn't quite right, and as an ardent reader, I knew it couldn't be true unless this was, without a doubt, the final installment of the series.

However, even with the last book hypothesis, it was incorrect, and it was one of the worst literary robberies perpetrated by an author on the audience, in my opinion.

There were certain aspects of this new addition that I particularly like, such as the new addition herself. Renesmee, despite the fact that I despise her name, is charming and unique, and it's a joy to read about her. I liked how she was included, but it brought me to another aspect that I despised: Jacob's imprinting.

I find it disturbing when a mature guy imprints on a newborn. For those who are unfamiliar, imprinting is akin to meeting one's soulmate. It's really frightening to me that author would write anything like this about one of the major characters, especially since this is a young adult's book series.

After rushing through the first three volumes with feeling a lot, little and no attachment to the characters, depending on who they are, this one actually provided me with a few chuckle moments as well as a few narrative twists I hadn't anticipated.

This novel, on the other hand, felt like it should have been split into at least two parts. After spending so much time seeing everything through Bella's eyes, I felt it a little jarring to read from Jacob's perspective, and the switches in stories seemed a little forced as if there was an urgent desire to tie up all the loose ends.

Whatever the narrative and events in this book and the series were, I still appreciated the books. They were really lengthy. It extended my experience of this otherworldly existence, albeit unnecessarily at times.

It provided me with a well-deserved break from my own world, free of constant distractions. This is known as the pleasure of reading for amusement.


Final Thoughts:

The Twilight Series, in my opinion, is like fast food: tasty and entertaining, but not particularly nutritious. Having said that, I have finished the entire series. While I enjoyed the first three volumes, I found this one to be much less so.

I thought it was hurried in execution; the author covers a lot of territory in terms of narrative events, but doesn't really develop many of them, and then tends to toss in random occurrences and details that don't really help the story's forward momentum.

I loved this book as much as the others in the Twilight series, however, it is like fast food, as I previously stated. The fourth and last installment of the Twilight series, however, was by far the most intriguing.

Bella formally joins the Cullen family in this book. This novel is clearly intended for a more mature readership than the previous ones. Sex scenes and references to sex may be found throughout the novel.

It was clear from the start that this book would be considerably odd than the others. I don't want to give anything away, but suffice it to say that the final volume in the series was built on the foundation of abnormal surprises and the establishment of strange connections.

Some of the speech was so clichéd that I could get the feeling that I was listening to a sitcom laugh track in the backdrop.

Finally, it provides a quick read and pleasure, but it is significantly less enjoyable than the other three volumes.


Synopsis:

“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, she has endured a tumultuous year of temptation, loss, and strife to reach the ultimate turning point.

Her imminent choice to either join the dark but seductive world of immortals or pursue a fully human life has become the thread from which the fate of two tribes hangs.

Now Bella has made her decision; a startling chain of unprecedented events is about to unfold with potentially devastating and unfathomable consequences. Just when the frayed strands of Bella's life - first discovered in Twilight, then scattered and torn in New Moon and Eclipse - seem ready to heal and knit together, could they be destroyed...forever?

The astonishing, breathlessly anticipated conclusion to the Twilight Saga, Breaking Dawn illuminates the secrets and mysteries of this spellbinding romantic epic.”


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Rating: 95/100
Recommended: 90/100 Yes.

Buy the Kindle Version Here

Free With Free Audible Trial

The Twilight Saga Complete Collection

Twilight (2010) (PG-13)

New Moon (2009) (PG-13)

Eclipse (2010) (PG-13)

Breaking Dawn - Part 1 (2011) (PG-13)

Breaking Dawn - Part 2 (2012) (PG-13)

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