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Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)

Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)

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Author: Stephenie Meyer
Publisher: Little, Brown Young Readers
Category: EBooks

List Price: $10.99
Buy New: $6.04
You Save: $4.95 (45%)

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2476 reviews
Sales Rank: 4

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: Standard
Reading Level: Young Adult
Pages: 544
Number Of Items: 1

ASIN: B000QRIGLW

Publication Date: July 18, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
The book that started the phenomenon is now available in a deluxe collector's edition! Featuring a ribbon bookmark, cloth cover, ragged edges, new chapter opener designs, and a beautiful protective slipcase, this edition is perfect for fans and collectors alike.

Bella Swan's move to Forks, a small, perpetually rainy town in Washington, could have been the most boring move she ever made. But once she meets the mysterious and alluring Edward Cullen, Bella's life takes a thrilling and terrifying turn. Up until now, Edward has managed to keep his vampire identity a secret in the small community he lives in, but now nobody is safe, especially Bella, the person Edward holds most dear.

Deeply romantic and extraordinarily suspenseful, Twilight captures the struggle between defying our instincts and satisfying our desires. This is a love story with bite.


Product Description
Isabella Swan's move to Forks, a small, perpetually rainy town in Washington, could have been the most boring move she ever made. But once she meets the mysterious and alluring Edward Cullen, Isabella's life takes a thrilling and terrifying turn. Up until now, Edward has managed to keep his vampire identity a secret in the small community he lives in, but now nobody is safe, especially Isabella, the person Edward holds most dear. The lovers find themselves balanced precariously on the point of a knife-between desire and danger. Deeply romantic and extraordinarily suspenseful, Twilight captures the struggle between defying our instincts and satisfying our desires. This is a love story with bite.-


Customer Reviews:   Read 2471 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Not just for young adults   September 30, 2005
N. Gargano (Waynesville NC and Bradenton, Fl)
501 out of 737 found this review helpful

I am a big vampire genre fan, so when I saw this book in a magazine, it caught my eye. I have to admit, I felt a little funny even thinking of buying it, because it is listed and shelved as a young adult book. Well, I decided to "bite" the bullet, and I purchased it, curled up with it over a weekend, and could not put it down. Don't let the fact that you have to visit a different section of the book store stop you from reading it, (or of course, purchase it on Amazon, no one will ever know if you don't want them too). This is a really great book with real emotions all wrapped up in a vampire story, a young woman's story of having to grow up faster then she maybe should have because of her parents, and yet still dealing with all the issues that growing up brings with it. All in all, a great book, glad I decided to overlook the age description.


5 out of 5 stars 144 positive reviews - and they're right!   March 6, 2006
K. Corn (Indianapolis,, IN United States)
43 out of 82 found this review helpful

This time the readers got it right. This is a book well worth reading and an absolute MUST for fans of themes revolving around vampires. Buffy fans should be delighted by this one as well.

By the way, don't be put off by the fact that it was written for the Young Adult crowd. It has plenty to engage any adult reader as well, from romance, bittersweet moments and, of course, the dilemna of vampire meets human, including romance and danger.

THere are also two competing vampire "clans" leading to moments of great suspense.



5 out of 5 stars Intoxicating and addictive   September 24, 2006
T. Burger (Chicago)
59 out of 83 found this review helpful

"Real" Rating: 5+

For any potential readers concerned that this might be a retread of twelve combined seasons of Buffy and Angel, set your fears aside. It's not. That said, now go and buy the book.

Buffy and Angel were never set in "our" world - the real world. It was the "Buffy" universe, and/or the "Angel" universe. At first glance, it seems inconceivable that Bella not realize what Edward is. Most of the requisite indicators are evident. You find yourself reading and wondering how Bella could possibly guess "Peter Parker" instead of "vampire", but then it sinks in. Bella can't conceive of such a thing because this book is firmly, irrevocably set in our world, and that, indeed, is the magic of this story.

It is a remarkable accomplishment, often attempted, but rarely achieved, and far more rarely executed with such (apparent) ease.

I did not expect to like this book, and started to read it only as a courtesy to the person who gave it to me for my birthday. But twenty pages in, I was hooked. If we want to follow that metaphor to its inevitable conclusion, I was so hooked that by the time I finished it I was in the fisherman's pail, flopping around as if gasping for air. Instead, I was begging for a sequel. Thankfully, I already knew that the sequel was out.

To quote a character from the book, "W - o - w". I haven't sped through something like this since I picked up the first Harry Potter book.

Ms. Meyer handled the developing relationship between Edward and Bella with the mark of a seasoned professional, not a first-time novelist. We need to remember that this is coming-of-age book, or a romance - more a combination of "Catcher in the Rye" and "Pride and Prejudice" than a vampire story. It certainly has far more in common with those two books than "The Vampire Lestat". (And, of course, Buffy and Angel.)

It is very difficult to write a coming-of-age story. Why? It's been done a million times, and finding new material to mine becomes more difficult every month. It's also difficult to write a vampire story. Why? Same reason. Yet those reasons didn't give Ms. Meyers, it seems, any pause. It would have given me considerable pause. Kudos to her bravery.

Edward Cullen, the vampire, is perfect - and we are reminded of exactly how perfect nearly too often. While reading the book, I found myself frustrated with the never-ending descriptions of his perfect body, perfect hair, model-like looks (maybe I was jealous?) but then I realized that the book wasn't being written in the third person. It's a first-person narrative, so we're getting the story as *Bella* tells it, and how Bella sees it. His burning black eyes, or warm topaz/butterscotch eyes, are magnets to her, as are every single movement he makes. It's not difficult to step back into high school and remember your first love (or crush) and recall similar feelings. Their eyes never ceased to captivate you; their smile melted you; when they kissed you, you felt faint. And you felt these things every single time you saw that person.

One of the more interesting aspects of the book is that we never get a sense for how unique and beautiful Bella is until we start to see her through Edward's eyes. This being a first-person narrative, it takes a while for the reader to understand how Bella - so awkward that she can trip while walking on a flat surface - could have fascinated such a magnificent...creature. I even questioned it myself while making my way through the book. But again, Ms. Meyer's deft hand brings the realization of how special Bella is very slowly and deliberately - much the way in which we didn't find out why Bella moved to Forks until page 50 or so, and why we never knew exactly why Edward had such a powerful, apparently repulsed reaction to Bella when they first came close to each other.

That's just one thing that makes a writer truly exceptional - the ability to hold back, and tell the story as the story needs to be told. Or to put it another way, to know exactly how the story needs to be told. That might just be the most difficult task a writer has. There are a million ways to tell the story in the writer's head, but to find the right way is often elusive.

This was such a remarkable and refreshing story. Even when Buffy and Angel similarities started to pop up, they quickly fell away as Ms. Meyer staked an irrevocable claim to this story as absolutely her own. Nothing borrowed, nothing...

The representation of the vampires, their unique talents, and the unique way in which they blend into society is marvelous, and provides a firm backbone to the story. While this is a story that is decidedly told in our world, and while I have said that this is more of a coming-of-age story than a vampire story, there are still vampires in it, and the vampires - the fantastical elements of the story - need to be believable. If not, the entire story, no matter how well told, falls apart, and the reader is left wondering why the vampires are even in the story. Her vampires, and their lore, are distinctly drawn.

I wanted to title this review, "My brand of heroin", from a line in the book, but thought twice seeing as it's a young adult book and I didn't want parents or anyone else thinking that I was advocating heroin use, or claiming to be a heroin addict, etc. But this book is absolutely intoxicating and perhaps addictive. Thankfully, the worst side effect of the intoxication is you might suffer a lack of sleep on *one* night (if you have the time, it shouldn't take much longer), and the addiction - to a book - is harmless. Unless, of course, that book actually contained heroin, and then we'd be talking a bit differently about this one.



5 out of 5 stars Twilight   August 25, 2007
Haley (West of the Horizon)
20 out of 29 found this review helpful

After hearing praise after praise after praise of this book, I finally caved in and bought it. I know why I waited so long -- even though vampires, werewolves, and high school can be mingled oh-so-well, it was still a *shudder* ROMANCE. Yes, I need to grow up sometime in the vague future, but I have a thing with romances.

I needn't have feared. TWILIGHT, while being appropriately sweet and touching and, dare I mention it, romantic, wasn't irritatingly shallow (a problem some romances have, particularly teen romances) nor did it have an excess of extraordinarily sappy scenes with bad dialogue. It blew me away -- I was expecting good, but not THIS good: the book has an indescribable aura of CantPutItDown that sticks even in the non-action scenes. In other words, it's perfect.

One thing I really liked was that Bella wasn't fawning over Edward like some mindless obsessive creature. She was just as sarcastically funny toward him as to everyone else, and just as occasionally grumpy. This definitely added a reality to the romance, and a sense of "humanity" -- pardon the irony -- to Edward.

TWILIGHT is the sort of book you just ENJOY reading. There's something about it -- whether it's the vampires, the realism, the romance, or some blend of both -- that just makes it flawless.

Now, despite myself, I've managed to become another abject fan of the Twilight series. I'm scheming out a way to get the second book right -- this -- minute...


Rating: Masterpiece



5 out of 5 stars Absolutely amazing!   October 22, 2005
Lyn (Virginia)
18 out of 27 found this review helpful

Quite possibly one of my top five favorite books of all time, "Twilight" captured my attention and heart in the first few pages. What is so remarkable about this book is that the author incorporates such realistic themes into the story that it is hard to discern the fantasy elements. The author touches on everyday teenager topics such as moving to a new town, fitting in to a new school, and falling in love.

When the main character, seventeen-year-old Isabella "Bella" leaves her home in Arizona with her mother and moves to the little town of Forks, Washington to live with her dad, it seems that she will never get used to certain things: the constant clouds and rain, the forests all around her, and the smallness of her school, where everyone seems to know everybody. Luckily, Bella is welcomed immediately by her schoolmates; that is, except for a boy named Edward Cullen, who on the first day of school gives her such looks as to make her believe that he finds her utterly repulsive, which is a huge mystery to her. When she asks her new friends about him, they say that he is the adoptive son of Dr. Cullen, and his "siblings" include Jasper, Emmett, Alice, and Rosalie. All five are incredibly beautiful, in a cold and pale way.

Eventually Edward begins talking to Bella, who is in his Biology class, and Bella notices that he and his family are very different from the other students; for one thing, Edward's eyes slowly change color within the span of two weeks from golden to black; he is always in a darker mood when his eyes are black; he and his family move with incredible, no, impossible speed; and although he seems to like Bella, he is constantly warning her to stay away from him.

To top everything off, Edward always seems to appear when Bella is in some sort of danger, always in time to rescue her.

Eventually, Bella finds out what Edward really is: a vampire born in the early nineteen hundreds. In fact, Edward's whole family is vampires, and some of them even have special abilities: Edward can read minds, except for some reason Bella's is blocked to him; Jasper can control people's emotions; and Alice can see into the future. Fortunately, this family of vampires is totally against drinking the blood of humans; they have learned to control their urges and therefore can attend school and mingle freely with the students.

In spite of themselves, Edward and Bella fall deeply in love, but there is a problem: because Edward is a vampire, he is drawn to blood, and Bella's smell is especially sweet to him, so it is dificult for the two of them to get too close. However, this does not stop them from loving one another, and they find ways around this.

Later on in the story, there is a conflict with other vampires who also find Bella's blood appealling, and the Cullen family of vampires works hard to protect their Bella, who has become important to them as well as Edward.

I don't know if anyone else ever worries about this, but I like happy endings, and obviously vampires are immortal and don't grow old, which presents a problem with their mortal lovers, because it could quite obviously lead to a not-so-happy ending. However, I just want everyone to know that the book does end on what I would consider a happy note.

The author does a GREAT, great job of portraying the vampire world in a totally new light; the vampires of this story are so intriguing!
I would consider "Twilight" to be mostly a love story, and let me tell you, an absolutely breathtaking one! Edward and Bella's love is one that transcends all time.

Trust me, you DEFINITELY do not want to miss this one.


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