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Jun. 7th, 2010

  • 11:50 AM
pepper: Pile of old books (Books)
Things I've been involved in the design concept of, recently (i.e. wouldn't-it-be-great-if...):

- Antigravity bra: a small device which sticks to the underside of the boob - no more red marks!
- "Space trays": again with the antigravity - baking trays that hover next to you when you have no work surfaces available.
- Vampires that bake: because no one is going to suspect a baker of being a vampire, right? And, if they're like Spike, they'll like a little something to crumble into the blood, give it a bit of texture (ew). No, really - it'd be awesome! Hollywood blockbuster material.

---

People who have read Twilight: does any character, at any point, tell Bella to stop being so whiny and self-absorbed? Or do they all enable her personal pity party, like Edward seems to be doing so far? I'm nearly 100 pages in, and dear god do I need someone to tell her to shut the hell up. Oh noes, her parents divorced (without any apparent acrimony, when she was a baby)! Oh noes, she has to live with her father (who loves her a lot and has bought her a car)! Oh noes, she has to leave behind, uh, no friends that even merit a name! Oh noes, she misses her mother (although not enough to remember to email her until three days after she arrives)! Oh noes, she's the new girl in school, and only makes half a dozen friends straight away, including three boys who fancy her! Oh noes, it... rains a lot!

Cry moar, emo girl.

And her reaction to seeing snow for the first time ever?

"Ew." Snow. There went my good day.
 
Did Stephanie Meyer make Bella the world's wettest blanket on purpose, or am I actually supposed to like her? Enquiring minds want to know.

I'm reading it for my Book Group; it's not by personal choice. It's also suffering in comparison to Sunshine, by Robin McKinley, which I also just read, and which is infinitely better. I want to throw Bella to Robin McKinley's vampires, see how long she survives with them. Gah.

Comments

holdouttrout: not your ordinary fish (Default)
[personal profile] holdouttrout wrote:
Jun. 7th, 2010 04:14 pm (UTC)
Okay, for REAL, I read your idea about Vampires that Bake and immediately thought of Sunshine (which, no, not the same thing, but it has vampires and baking!). *g*

But no, no one ever calls Bella on her wet-blanket personality. IF ONLY. Honestly, I wouldn't re-read those books or inflict them on anyone. (I read all four, Cthulu only knows why.)

And damn, but I could use an anti-grav bra.
pepper: Pile of old books (Books)
[personal profile] pepper wrote:
Jun. 7th, 2010 07:21 pm (UTC)
Hee! Yes, that was what inspired the baking vampires idea - I was trying to explain Sunshine to someone, and she got the wrong end of the stick. :D

Ohhhhhhh, I so hope I don't end up needing to read the others. I can't stand Bella, Edward is a mere cipher based on a juvenile idea of the ideal man... I'm entirely failing to understand why Twilight is so huge, and Sunshine isn't. Or why Twilight is so huge, period.

And, yes. All it needs is for someone to invent antigravity... d'oh.
holdouttrout: not your ordinary fish (Default)
[personal profile] holdouttrout wrote:
Jun. 7th, 2010 08:16 pm (UTC)
Whatever you do, DON'T READ Breaking Dawn. It's by far the most frustrating one of them all. However, DO read Cleolinda's Twilight recaps. :-)
[personal profile] crazedturkey wrote:
Jun. 8th, 2010 12:49 am (UTC)
Ah but Breaking Dawn has the most awesome caeserean section scene in the history of fiction. Rigel told me I was going to be disturbed and when I laughed my way through it I think SHE was disturbed :p
pepper: Pepperpot (Default)
[personal profile] pepper wrote:
Jun. 8th, 2010 09:57 am (UTC)
Hee. I've read Cleolinda's recap of that. I might have to read the others just so I can read that book. Meyer would feel totally at home with the crowd on on samandjackalwaysandforever, wouldn't she?
pepper: Pile of old books (Books)
[personal profile] pepper wrote:
Jun. 8th, 2010 09:58 am (UTC)
Heh, yes, I read the one for Breaking Dawn, and pretty much decided then never to read the series. Damn book group...
sin_after_sin: (Default)
[personal profile] sin_after_sin wrote:
Jun. 11th, 2010 07:11 pm (UTC)
My guess on why it's so big amongst teenagers and some women is that Edward is one of those safe, brooding heroes they can fantasize about when real life is being really scary. He's completely focused on Bella to a degree that some find alarming, but to an awkward teenager who is beginning to face sexual feelings, that would be really reassuring. Bella doesn't have to DO anything to keep Edward interested. There's no actual pressure about sex, because Edward is the one who denies it. He's completely dedicated and obsessed, but because it's a romance the reader KNOWS he's safe, unlike the same thing in real life. It's true love. It's an immortal life. It's having power and being admired.

Jesus. I'd have been all over that guy when I was 14 or 15. The grown women who love him are a little harder to explain, but I'm guessing it's the same thing. Just... maybe they haven't had as much experience as many other women. Or they just like vampires, I guess.

But good lord, those books could have been written better. The last book especially... I wanted to kick Meyer, because her writing got better in some ways, and yet... so, so far away.

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