Edward is the quiet bookish and Emmett is a vampire jock bro. How was his camping trip with Emmett? Did he catch a bear or caribou? Emmett says maybe five things during the whole series. What's his favorite song that isn't "Clair de Lune"? #DoYouEvenDebussyBroġ3. This is more of an observation than a question but Edward really needs to work on his poker face.ġ2. How does he feel when he realizes he can't read her mind?ġ1. Does Edward use whitening strips or LED light?ġ0. But I imagine that blood will stain the way black coffee and red wine do. Bella describes him as having ultra white teeth.
How many languages does Edward speak? Stefan Salvatore can speak many languages. Where else has Edward lived? Creatures of the night can go anywhere, so why Forks?Ĩ. What if I'm the bad guy?" Who is Edward's favorite superhero and villain? Does he even like comic books?ħ. What is going through his mind when he first sees her?Ħ. Flushed from the snow fight, maybe.” What is his skincare regimen? Being undead is no reason to be ashy. She notices when he goes from pale to paler. Bella is obsessed with Edward's epidermis. Did Edward make a snowman when everyone was having a snowball fight?Ĥ. When was the last time Edward fed before then? He can barely control his blood lust around Bella, so did he not eat his breakfast of champions that morning?ģ. If Alice could see strangers like Victoria, James, and Laurent come to town, did her Spidey-senses tingle when Bella made the decision to move to Forks? A little heads up that Edward was going to meet his soul mate would have been nice, Alice.Ģ. We get inside the mind of the 100-year-old vampire heartthrob and I, for one, have questions that need answering.ġ. I am now extremely ready for Midnight Sun, the long-awaited retelling of Twilight from Edward Anthony Cullen's POV. In 24 hours I have re-read and re-watched Twilight. No miracle vampire baby for Edythe and Beau.Ĭredit: Little Brown Books for Young Readers Though I will say that I would loooooove to have seen how Meyer would have handled the Renesmee storyline in Breaking Dawn. Every character in the story gets a heteronormative binary gender "swap" for a single book. In an interview with MTV.com Stephenie Meyer insisted that the core story wouldn't change. What if the brooding vampire was a girl? What if the clumsy new student was a boy? On one side was the classic version, and on the other side was a reimagining of Edythe and Beau. It was like a choose-your-own-adventure for the vampire-human romance. A decade after Twilight's initial publication, Meyer released Life and Death: Twilight Reimagined. But Meyer has reimagined their love story twice. Bella's straightforward narration is an intense inner monologue dedicated to Edward. Edward is a sparkly, brooding, tortured vampire whose life changes when he meets a girl. Twilight's legacy is a dichotomy of adoring fans who irrevocably love it and fierce feminist criticism. Martin's Game of Thrones gender-bent Daenerys and Jon Snow. Imagine if Leigh Bardugo wrote Shadow and Bone from the Darkling's POV or if George R.R. Meyer has been able to do what, to my understanding, no other author has been able to do with their debut novel: She's been able to reinvent and reimagine her main characters in different ways. The teen love story between a vampire and the girl whose blood he craves, Twilight has sold millions of copies worldwide and sparked five feature films. With the impending release of Midnight Sun, and with it Stephenie Meyer's return to Forks, Washington, I certainly have questions.