Subject: As much as I wish I could believe that...
Author:
Posted on: 2012-08-22 03:00:00 UTC
If you've read any of her author interviews, or just about anything else she's said, it's clear that she really is 100% sincere. She honestly believes that Edward is the single most wonderful romantic interest in all of literature, and that everyone should wish that they were Bella.
The book's details are even well-documented. It began from a dream she had, about a girl in a meadow talking to the most beautiful boy in the world, who sparkled. He was telling her that they couldn't be together because he was dangerous. Meyer was immediately captivated, and felt she had to write their story.
It's unfortunately very earnest, and that's the biggest problem with it. Were it a parody, it would be far more accepted, because that implies a self-awareness and acknowledgement that this stuff is super screwed up. Even if it had been written differently, the story of a girl deluded into thinking that a creepy monster stalker was her True Love could be an effective meta-horror story, and a very deep, cutting commentary on romanticism and naïveté. But it's presented as the most perfect happy romance ever, and that's the problem.