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| by Jessica Minozzo on July 30 - 11:47 am PDT |
LOVEEEEEDD IT … |
| by ilovethepack. on July 30 - 12:07 pm PDT |
I dont feel like reading today..but is breaking dawn taller than the other books? it appeared so..if so..thaaaat means there are MORE WORDS..but the bad thing is it wont fit in as well with twilight new moon and eclipse. well i HOPE IT IS..BECAUSE MORE WORDS ARE BETTER THAN NOT FITTING. hahahah |
| by Gretchen on July 30 - 12:08 pm PDT |
I dont think its taller. And if it was, I dont think that would mean more words. But the host is enormously tall and it doesnt fit on my shelf haha. |
| by Ann on July 30 - 12:11 pm PDT |
no it’s not taller, it’s the angle of the picture that makes it seem that way.. and wth? the article said Bella was a “16 yr-old girl..” and that she sees “FOUR members of the Cullen clan..” at lunch the first day.. righttt..<_< |
| by Olivia on July 30 - 1:23 pm PDT |
There were a TON of mistakes! |
| by Alaina on July 30 - 5:07 pm PDT |
This was such a biased, offensive and demeaning article that I am suprised you even posted it here. The author basically said “the books are horrible pieces of trash which demean women, and those who read them are anti-feminists who only want to fantasize about Edward. They described Bella as spineless, week and a “place holder” with no personality (excuse me, but I think Bella is such a great protagonist because she is just like every other teenage girl who feels insecure and unimportant.) But I think what makes Bella such a great role model for young adults is her ability to love unconditionally and to see past stereotypes and prejudices. Her love for all the Cullens, her father and her mother is her “superpower” which everyone seems to think she lacks. She is most definitely not a Mary-Sue by anyone’s definition (hello, did anyone read New Moon?!) and the people who read it aren’t only “pre-teens and their moms”. Don’t they know about all the college age students, the boys, the adult women and men, and the grandparents who have fallen in love with our beloved book? Now would their be such a fan following if the saga was little more than a Harloquin romance. This isn’t Gossip Girl here. Stephenie has a degree in English literature and is influenced by some of our societies most beloved classics… her writing style is detailed, unique and rich and her creativity is endless. That is why we “Twilighters” worship the pages she writes on |
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