Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Teen scream

Twilight series offers young people a twist on vampire fiction

Stephenie Meyer is the author of the popular Twilight teen vampire novels. (H.B. Fenn and Company) Stephenie Meyer is the author of the popular Twilight teen vampire novels. (H.B. Fenn and Company)

As vampires go, they weren’t the scariest bunch. Dare I say it, they were pretty cute, like Beatlemaniacs — only paler. The first ones started trickling in at nine in the morning and now, 10 hours later, the mob was 500 strong, spilling over from the seating area and clogging the bookstore’s every artery. As the anticipation mounted, cries of “I’m so excited!” and “I love you, Edward Cullen!” bubbled from the sea of prom dresses, black chokers and prosthetic fangs.

Costumes in place, the teenage girls had journeyed to this mall in suburban Pennsylvania to see Stephenie Meyer, the 33-year-old force behind the unnervingly absorbing Twilight teen vampire series. Meyer’s saga — the third book was published recently — offers readers supernatural bodice rippers without much bodice ripping (more on that later). Since its 2005 debut, the series has sold upwards of 2 million books, and the latest installment, Eclipse, sold 150,000 copies on its first day alone. With a certain boy wizard in retirement, Twilight is the biggest young-adult phenom going.

Frothing with romance and gothic atmosphere, the books tell the story of Bella Swan, a regular jeans-and-T-shirts girl who moves from Phoenix, Ariz., to a drizzly corner of Washington state. It’s all doom and gloom — that is, until she encounters boy-vampire Edward Cullen on the first day of school. “He was glaring down at me,” she narrates in the first book, Twilight, “his black eyes full of revulsion. As I flinched away from him, shrinking against my chair, the phrase if looks could kill suddenly ran through my mind.”

This bronze-haired, marble-skinned creature turns out to be anything but turned off by Bella; he’s just reacting to her irresistible smell. To his credit, he refrains from sucking her blood, and turns out to be the most considerate boy to have ever existed. He anticipates her every need, protects her from “bad” vampires, and, in book number three, proposes marriage. In the latest book, Eclipse, Bella ponders her options. Does she want to let Edward bite her and turn her into a vampire for eternity? (Obviously, what would be cooler than that?) But should she really get married at the age of 18? And what about her best friend, Jacob Black, the boy werewolf who’s admitted to being besotted with her? He’s kind of cute, too.

Fans at a Pennsylvania bookstore wait to meet Stephenie Meyer, whose Twilight series features the boy-vampire Edward Cullen. (Lauren Mechling/CBC)
Fans at a Pennsylvania bookstore wait to meet Stephenie Meyer, whose Twilight series features the boy-vampire Edward Cullen. (Lauren Mechling/CBC)

Meyer’s personal appearances tend to entail waiting lists, admission fees, and long lines — all pretty much unheard of in an industry where most writers don’t even show up in bookstores for fear of thin to non-existent crowds. But, unlike most authors, she doesn’t read; she focuses instead on answering fans’ burning questions, and on signing books, of course. Many of the kids at the event in Pennsylvania travelled for six hours to see Meyer up close. “I’ve had parents come farther than that,” said Meyer, whose website features a picture of herself posing with a fan who few from Munich to attend an appearance in San Francisco.

Most fans profess to have romantic feelings for Edward or Jacob, and attribute their love of Meyer’s books to her “realistic” writing style. It’s not unusual in her books, which are 550 pages on average, for a scene to span twenty pages, long enough to mention every sound, every change in speaking tone, every infinitesimal change in facial expression. But what may come across as flat-footed to an adult reader seems to hold youngsters in a hypnotic sway. “It’s like you’re actually living it,” said a freckle-faced 13-year-old who skipped school to see Meyer. “Of all the crushes I have ever had, whether it be on real people or characters, in books or movies, [Edward] definitely takes the cake, hands down,” another reader posted on Twilight Lexicon, one of the many fan sites devoted to Meyer’s oeuvre.

The series has been optioned for film adaptation by Summit Entertainment, the production company behind American Pie, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, and In the Valley of Elah, and two more books are scheduled to come out by 2009. Meanwhile, Meyer is finishing edits on The Host, a body-snatcher tale for adults set for publication early next year. “I’m not the most prolific writer,” Meyer insisted. “Christopher Paolini’s [author of the dragon series Eragon] books are longer than mine, and I’m sure there are adult writers who have new books coming out every three months.”

Meyer is a former stay-at-home mom who preferred Jane Austen and the Book of Mormon to “scary stuff.” (As a self-described “extremely religious” Mormon, she doesn’t watch R-rated movies.) She said the idea that developed into Twilight, the first book in the series, came to her in a dream in 2002, when she was 29. She started writing it down and three months later she had a book, which she sent to ten different agents. Nine rejected her. One bit, so to speak.

(H.B. Fenn and Company) (H.B. Fenn and Company)

“I think I’m a better writer now. I think Twilight was rough because I was just getting started.” Her characters are growing with her, Meyer said. “I never intended the series to feel like one of the serials where the characters are always sophomores in high school going to the same prom in every book. They’re aging, and the whole story has gotten more complicated. My characters always felt really real so they’re growing up quite a bit and learning a lot and every book reflects that.”

Vampire lust notwithstanding, Meyer’s books are fairly innocent, free of the drinking and sexual experimentation that she sees in most teen fiction. “I do get upset with the premise of so many YA books,” she said. “Regardless of what the story is about, the characters all smoke and drink and they all have had sex multiple times.… I think that girls who are not a part of that situation feel like they can’t identify with that.”

The Mormon Church has yet to issue an official statement on Meyer’s work, though they probably appreciate her success (the church requires members to tithe 10 per cent of their income; Meyer would not comment on the matter). When a Phoenix church representative was asked what he thought by a local newspaper, he said that he had no comment but his wife and daughter were big fans. “I thought that was really sweet,” Meyer said. “I’m very comfortable with [the series] and my dad reads it — that’s the biggest self-censoring thing you could have.”

She attributes Bella’s appeal to the simple fact that she’s normal. “In a lot of young adult books, characters find out they’re adopted and they’re some cool exciting exotic thing and they’re meant to rule some country you’ve never heard of,” she said. “That’s a cool fantasy but it’s hard for me to identify with because in reality I know I don’t have magic powers. I think Bella’s nice because you don’t have to know kung fu to feel like you could be in her shoes.”

Meyer has already come up with the plot for her next two “Twilight” books (and is developing storylines for future projects, including one about a mermaid, the mythical creature Meyer says she’d most like to be). Fans are constantly sending e-mails to her to suggest plot points, but with the “Twilight” narrative locked down, the only fan input she’s open to is the occasional name suggestion. “For instance,” Meyer said, “I needed to name a vampire and I wanted to make sure it would sound like what a teen’s name would be today.” A fan called Brie offered up her name. Meyer thought it was perfect, but made sure to ask Brie if she minded getting killed. “She was like, ‘No, that’s cool!’”

Stephenie Meyer will be appearing in Toronto as part of her book tour on Nov. 2, 2007.

Lauren Mechling is a New York-based writer.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.

More from this Author

Lauren Mechling

Dare to be dull
Living by the code of The Daring Book for Girls
Faking it
Author Pierre Bayard talks knowingly about books he hasn't read
Teen scream
Twilight series offers young people a twist on vampire fiction
The long tale
Writer Armistead Maupin reunites his fictional family
Star material
Toronto's Alison Pill gets emotional in the off-Broadway drama Blackbird
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

U.S. toning down pleas for help with Afghan mission, Gates says
The United States will soften its appeals to NATO allies for more troops in Afghanistan, U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday.
December 14, 2007 | 3:23 PM EST
Envoys take overnight break as Bali conference extended
International envoys at the UN climate conference take an overnight break in final talks as they work to resolve a dispute over their goal in negotiating future cutbacks in global-warming gases.
December 14, 2007 | 7:38 AM EST
Lebanese army general laid to rest in state funeral
Hundreds of Lebanese came out in pouring rain Friday for a farewell ceremony for one of the country's top generals, whose killing has raised fears that even the respected army is not immune to the country's ongoing violence.
December 14, 2007 | 7:24 AM EST
more »

Canada »

Report calls for RCMP to split from federal government
A report released Friday recommended that the RCMP become a separate entity from the federal government, with its own civilian board of managers.
December 14, 2007 | 6:29 AM EST
Top court upholds religious divorce agreement
The country's highest court delivered a landmark ruling Friday upholding a $47,500 award to a Jewish woman whose husband refused for 15 years to grant her a religious divorce.
December 14, 2007 | 11:00 AM EST
Vancouver crowned break-in capital of North America
A new report has given Vancouver a dubious honour: the highest break-in rate of all major Canadian and American cities, nearly four times that of New York City.
December 14, 2007 | 2:49 PM EST
more »

Health »

New sterilization technique for women to be reviewed by FDA
An advisory panel to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is recommending approval of a new method of sterilization for women.
December 14, 2007 | 10:46 AM EST
Alberta amputee program follows on U.S. rehab success
An Edmonton soldier who lost both legs in a suicide attack in Afghanistan has helped develop a program called Freedom Through Sport at the University of Alberta.
December 14, 2007 | 11:33 AM EST
Donmar oregano recalled in Ont. for possible salmonella contamination
Canada's food watchdog is warning consumers that Donmar Rubbed Oregano may be tainted with salmonella.
December 14, 2007 | 10:28 AM EST
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Crowe, Kidman top Forbes list of most overpaid actors
Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman have topped a Forbes list of the most overpaid actors in Hollywood.
December 14, 2007 | 2:47 PM EST
Dion bids farewell to Sin City stage
Canadian superstar Cline Dion takes the stage for the final time at her Las Vegas spectacular A New Day on Saturday after a run of nearly five years and having been seen by more than three million people.
December 14, 2007 | 2:32 PM EST
Monsoon Wedding coming to Broadway stage
Mira Nair, the New York-based director of the 2001 film Monsoon Wedding is developing the exotic family drama for the stage.
December 14, 2007 | 12:31 PM EST
more »

Technology & Science »

UV light makes fluorescent felines glow
South Korean scientists have cloned cats that glow red when exposed to ultraviolet rays.
December 14, 2007 | 9:46 AM EST
Google's 'knowledge' project takes aim at Wikipedia
Google Inc. is testing a new user tool that invites people to write authoritative articles on particular subjects, a move that could put the internet search giant in direct competition with the popular online encyclopedia Wikipedia.
December 14, 2007 | 12:29 PM EST
Soyuz rocket lifts Canadian radar satellite into space
A Russian rocket blasted off in Kazahkstan Friday morning, carrying with it a Canadian satellite built to keep a watchful eye over the Arctic.
December 14, 2007 | 8:41 AM EST
more »

Money »

BCE denies talks are afoot to reprice takeover
BCE issued a denial on Friday that it is in talks to renegotiate the terms of its sale to a group led by the private investment arm of the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.
December 14, 2007 | 3:02 PM EST
Transat A.T. earnings weighed down by ABCP charge
Travel company Transat A.T. Inc. said Friday that an $11.2-million writedown on asset-backed commercial paper pulled its earnings lower in the fourth quarter.
December 14, 2007 | 9:25 AM EST
U.S. consumer prices surged in November
Higher gas prices sent U.S. consumer inflation in November to its biggest jump since September 2005, the U.S. Labour Department said Friday.
December 14, 2007 | 11:48 AM EST
more »

Consumer Life »

Ottawa police investigate 'inappropriate' letters from Santa
Ottawa police have launched an investigation after a complaint that at least 10 Ottawa children have received letters from Santa Claus containing demeaning or insulting language.
December 14, 2007 | 10:39 AM EST
Toyota recalls 15,600 Tundra trucks in U.S.
Toyota is recalling 15,600 Tundra four-by-four pickup trucks to repair a propeller shaft, the Japanese automaker said Friday.
December 14, 2007 | 2:56 PM EST
Seniors charged in $2M banking fraud
A trio of seniors is facing charges of fraud and money laundering in a scheme police say involved the theft of more than $2 million.
December 14, 2007 | 1:43 PM EST
more »

Sports »

Scores: CFL MLB MLS

Leafs' Toskala ready to hit road
Maple Leafs goalie Vesa Toskala, whose hot play has helped key his team's resurrection, will be counted on to shoulder the load as Toronto opens a season-high seven-game road swing Friday in Atlanta.
December 14, 2007 | 2:11 PM EST
Alzner named world junior captain
Calgary Hitmen defenceman Karl Alzner, an assistant captain for Canada at last summer's Super Series, will sport the captain's C at the upcoming World Junior Hockey Championship.
December 14, 2007 | 1:37 PM EST
No point worrying for Raptors
With T.J. Ford expected to miss another game, the Toronto Raptors look to win four straight for the first time this season whey they visit Indiana on Friday.
December 14, 2007 | 12:28 PM EST
more »