61 pages • 2 hours read
Stephenie MeyerA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
With the advent of modern birth-control methods, teens today don’t face the same dangers surrounding accidental pregnancies that their grandparents confronted. Nonetheless, sex remains a fraught topic, and many or most parents still feel tremendous reluctance about their children’s experiments with sexuality. Billy Black’s repeated warnings to Bella about the dangers of dating Edward stand in for the worries most parents feel when their kids begin testing the waters of an activity that can have serious repercussions.
The author, a practicing Mormon, carefully kept from her novel tobacco, alcohol, and out-of-wedlock sex. She designed the plots of her Twilight series so that Bella and Edward refrain from consummating their love while they’re dating. The plot device that assures this is Edward’s fear that he might lose control or become too forceful and injure or kill Bella during sex. It’s not until Edward proposes to Bella in the third book of the series that intercourse between them begins to loom as a possibility.
Meyer sticks to her principles throughout the series. In Chapter 12, Bella breaks her drug-use rule and takes cold medicine to help her sleep. She apologizes to the reader for using an over-the-counter medicine in a manner other than its intended purpose. In this way, she also represents the author’s personal rules about mind-altering consumables.
The author manages to navigate these waters and arrive at a story that’s both compelling to general audiences and inoffensive to those who find fault with today’s alternative approaches to morality.
The author brings into the story a group of Native Americans, the Quileutes, who live in La Push and whose cultural mythology says they’re descended from wolves. For the book, the author expands this myth so that the Quileutes become guardians of the region against invasion by vampires. This puts them at loggerheads with the Cullen family of vampires, whom the La Push residents distrust but grudgingly accept as neighbors because of the coven’s reputation for peaceful relations with humans.
Though the Quileutes are introduced in Twilight, they remain largely in the background during the first book. Jacob Black befriends Bella, while her father, Charlie, continues his friendship with Jacob’s father, Billy. As the series progresses, the Quileutes become major characters. Most prominent among them is Jacob, who competes with Edward as a love interest of Bella and contends with a rapidly shifting political and military dynamic that troubles relations between the Quileutes and the Cullens.
The book spawned a set of cultural complexities that still resonate. Twilight film producers coordinated with the Quileutes. (Herrmann, Babette. “Quileute Tribe embraces ‘Twilight’ buzz.” Indian Country Today, updated 13 Sep 2018.) Exterior shots were filmed elsewhere, but the community of 2,000 has benefited from increased tourism. Some members believe, though, that the tribe should have been compensated for the use and adaptation of its cultural history. (Gunning, Cathal. “Twilight’s Quileute Controversy Explained.” Screen Rant, 21 Nov 2020.)
By Stephenie Meyer