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Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, Book 4)
Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, Book 4)

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Author: Stephenie Meyer
Publisher: Little, Brown Young Readers
Category: Book

List Price: $22.99
Buy New: $10.31
You Save: $12.68 (55%)



New (72) Used (26) Collectible (5) from $10.31

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 3465 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Reading Level: Young Adult
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 768
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 2.5

ISBN: 031606792X
EAN: 9780316067928

Publication Date: August 2, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: A20081118105433W

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga Book 4)
  • Hardcover - Breaking Dawn: Special Edition (The Twilight Saga)
  • Hardcover - Breaking Dawn (Waterstones)
  • Audio CD - Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, Book 4)
  • Audio Download - Breaking Dawn: The Twilight Saga, Book 4 (Unabridged)
  • Hardcover - Breaking Dawn
  • Hardcover - breaking dawn [ twilight saga book 4] (breaking dawn (book club))
  • Hardcover - Breaking Dawn (Twilight, Book 4)
  • Hardcover - Breaking Dawn (Twilight Saga)

Similar Items:

  • Eclipse (The Twilight Saga, Book 3)
  • New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)
  • Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)
  • The Host: A Novel
  • Marked (House of Night, Book 1)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Great love stories thrive on sacrifice. Throughout The Twilight Saga (Twilight, New Moon, and Eclipse), Stephenie Meyer has emulated great love stories--Romeo and Juliet, Wuthering Heights--with the fated, yet perpetually doomed love of Bella (the human girl) and Edward (the vampire who feeds on animals instead of humans). In Breaking Dawn, the fourth and final installment in the series, Bella’s story plays out in some unexpected ways. The ongoing conflicts that made this series so compelling--a human girl in love with a vampire, a werewolf in love with a human girl, the generations-long feud between werewolves and vampires--resolve pretty quickly, apparently so that Meyer could focus on Bella’s latest opportunity for self-sacrifice: giving her life for someone she loves even more than Edward. How close she comes to actually making that sacrifice is questionable, which is a big shift from the earlier books. Even though you knew Bella would make it through somehow, the threats to her life, and to her relationship with Edward, had previously always felt real. It’s as if Meyer was afraid of hurting her characters too much, which is unfortunate, because the pain Bella suffered at losing Edward in New Moon, and the pain Jacob suffered at losing Bella again and again, are the fire and the heart that drive the whole series. Diehard fans will stick with Bella, Edward, and Jacob for as many twists and turns as possible, but after most of the characters get what they want with little sacrifice, some readers may have a harder time caring what happens next. (Ages 12 and up) --Heidi Broadhead

Product Description
When you loved the one who was killing you, it left you no options. How could you run, how could you fight, when doing so would hurt that beloved one? If your life was all you had to give, how could you not give it? If it was someone you truly loved?

To be irrevocably in love with a vampire is both fantasy and nightmare woven into a dangerously heightened reality for Bella Swan. Pulled in one direction by her intense passion for Edward Cullen, and in another by her profound connection to werewolf Jacob Black, a tumultuous year of temptation, loss, and strife have led her to the ultimate turning point. Her imminent choice to either join the dark but seductive world of immortals or to pursue a fully human life has become the thread from which the fates of two tribes hangs.

Now that Bella has made her decision, a startling chain of unprecedented events is about to unfold with potentially devastating, and unfathomable, consequences. Just when the frayed strands of Bella's life-first discovered in Twilight, then scattered and torn in New Moon and Eclipse-seem ready to heal and knit together, could they be destroyed... forever?

The astonishing, breathlessly anticipated conclusion to the Twilight Saga, Breaking Dawn illuminates the secrets and mysteries of this spellbinding romantic epic that has entranced millions.



Customer Reviews:   Read 3460 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I loved it, with some exceptions!   November 19, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Warning, contains Plot Spoilers. Let me first say I loved the entire series, although there were many frustrations with the story along the way. With Breaking Dawn, I don't have the complaints that a lot of other people had with it. I was glad to see Bella become a vampire, and I loved the ending, even though there was no battle at the end. I didn't find the lack of a battle to be anticlimactic. I did wish there had been more time spent on Edward and Bella being together at the end along with Renesmee, but then I always want more time between the main romantic characters at the end of the story, especially when the story and the characters are so likable and interesting as Edward and Bella were.
My problem with BD was how the author dealt with Bella's pregnancy. Her pregnancy is one of the major story lines running through BD. But instead of doing it from Bella's perspective, or even Edward's(who is after all the main male character), she chose to do it from Jacob's perspective. All we get to see of Edward and Bella dealing with this event is through Jacob's eyes. Her reason was that she tried to do it from Bella's perspective with her on the couch the entire time and it came across as very boring.
I think it could have been done in such a way as to make it interesting from Bella's perspective. She even could have done it from Edwards perspective. I fact, I would've like to have read it from his perspective. Although I know it's only because it's only because he tried to take Bella away from Edward, otherwise finding him a likable character, I found Jacob to be very irritating.
It's like she's just getting the story started and she has to break away from Bella and Edward to tell more of Jacob's story, which I did find interesting but it just seemed to take away from Bella and Edward's story.
Even writing it from Jacob's perspective wouldn't have been so bad, if she had included a more of Bella and Edward in it. The biggest fault I have with it; I agree with Bella's decision to have the baby and to keep Edward and the others from getting rid of it. I understand that she loved the baby because it was Edward's and that she wanted to keep it. But we never get to see Bella try to make Edward understand why she wants to keep the baby even at the cost of her life. She never trys to explain it to him, at least that we are made aware of. It's like she just ignores Edward and the pain we see him go through as he watches her slowly waste away.
In spite of this though, I still found it to be a very entertaining read and a very satisfactory ending to the saga.



5 out of 5 stars Meyer's legions of fans are likely to debate, discuss and dissect BREAKING DAWN for months to come   November 19, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

At some point, writing reviews of certain bestselling series seems like a superfluous endeavor. When thousands, if not millions, of readers are going to pick up the next installment regardless of its praiseworthiness or potential weaknesses, we reviewers feel even more irrelevant than we do otherwise. Penning reviews of the later Harry Potter books certainly felt like that. Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Saga, a publishing juggernaut soon to be made into a series of feature films, also, I would argue, has landed firmly in this category. I've reviewed all four novels for [...], and I've watched as a series that started out as an unusual debut vampire romance took on a life of its own. So this review is, in all likelihood, completely unnecessary --- but since the review has the potential to live online nearly as long as the immortal Cullen family, here goes.

Bella Swan is ecstatic --- and nervous. She's on the brink of marrying the love of her life, the charismatic, devastatingly handsome vampire Edward Cullen. Bella's parents have reluctantly come around to the idea of their teenaged daughter getting married. And the Cullens, particularly Bella's good friend Alice, who plans the event, couldn't be happier. Only Bella's old pal Jacob is upset at losing Bella.

The wedding goes off smoothly and beautifully, and Edward and Bella spend a magical honeymoon on a private island. There, they are finally able to indulge the desire they've always felt for each other (even if their lovemaking initially results in injuries both to Bella and their room, thanks to Edward's uncontrollable passion). When Bella begins to be alternately sick and ravenous, she becomes suspicious that --- despite everything she's been told about the impossibility of such a thing --- she might be pregnant with Edward's child. Terrified that she could lose her life to the ravenous, vampiric unborn child inside her, pressured by Edward and others to rid herself of the baby, Bella retreats into herself, concerned only with protecting her unborn child, even if it means harm to herself.

As for Jacob (who narrates the middle part of the novel), he tries in vain to imprint on other females, but he cannot forget Bella, especially when he learns of her perilous pregnancy and physical condition. When Bella and Edward's daughter is born, is it possible that this half-human, half-vampire can unite the Cullens and Jacob's shape-shifting La Push clan? Could she be the catalyst for Jacob and Edward's reconciliation? Or does her very existence --- particularly once word of her birth reaches the dangerous Voltari vampire clan --- put everything Bella loves at risk?

It was perhaps inevitable that Stephenie Meyer would disappoint some with this final installment. Readers --- who have lined up for hours for author appearances, pushed the series onto bestseller lists, and created thriving online communities devoted to the book --- obviously take the novels, and these characters, seriously indeed. Certain elements of BREAKING DAWN are perplexing, even off-putting --- particularly the scenes of sex, pregnancy and childbirth.

But it's nearly impossible to please everyone --- especially when so much of the series' drama has relied on the tension of Bella's choice between two very different but desirable lovers. Readers who are able, eventually, to gain some perspective will find much to redeem BREAKING DAWN, particularly its new insights into Jacob's inner life as well as its neat resolution to several of the series' pressing conflicts and its realistic (or at least as realistic as a vampire romance can get) portrayal of the complexities and joys of married life.

Meyer's legions of fans are likely to debate, discuss and dissect BREAKING DAWN for months to come --- at least until the film version of TWILIGHT comes out on November 21st, when they'll have a whole new set of creative decisions to consider and critique.

--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl



5 out of 5 stars Breaking Dawn   November 19, 2008
 0 out of 6 found this review helpful

The Fourth book in this series has taken a lot of negative flack, very undeserved. I found it immensely satisfying and the sort of ending I had hoped for after the second book. The characters are full bodied and emotionally enjoyable.


5 out of 5 stars I really liked it   November 19, 2008
 0 out of 7 found this review helpful

I really liked it. Maybe it was because I read all 4 books back to back at once and there was no anticipation of waiting.


1 out of 5 stars So Disappointing!!!   November 19, 2008
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

**SPOILERS***

Like many others, I was so VERY disappointed with this book. Where did the characters we love go? Where did the beautiful love story go? The characters were one dimensional and obnoxious and the story was boring and weird. It made me wonder if the author has strange hang ups about sex. In the other three books, the kissing scenes were nice for the most part (until Edward would have his intense mood swings... guilt, anger, etc.). In this book, the scenes of intimacy were almost absent. Edward and/or Bella would mention that they are horny and then the next sentence would be them subtley referring to the sex that already happened... so weird and disappointing! For a love so intense and so "true", why are we not allowed any glimpse into the consumation of this love? The characters are married so it wouldn't be promoting immoral acts. I'm not even suggesting a smutty harlequin romance scene, but come on! Give us something!

And then there were the two weirdest/creepiest parts of the book... these have both been mentioned ad nauseum in other reviews, but I still MUST touch on them. The first, of course, is Edward tearing some pillows and the headboard to pieces during sex. So embarrasing and unsexy!!! I get that he was into it, but seriously? That is the only imagery she gives us about their first time together??? I just pictured Edward shaking the pillows in his mouth like a dog while having sex. Weird. The second and far more creepier scene was when Jacob imprinted on Renesme. Um what was THAT? And I wanted to punch Jake in the face when he was acting like the kid was his. He wouldn't even let mommy Bella hold her!! Oh and sidenote... why didn't they think of injecting venom before?? That would have solved the whole problem of Edward accidentally killing her instead of changing her into a vampire. And the author barely glazes over it. It was a huge difference from what the audience was expecting! Personally, I expected to read about Edward biting her and having all this internal struggle to not kill her. But whatever, that was the least of the unbeleivable parts of this book.

How about the fact that Bella has NO problems when she is a newborn vampire. She had no patience or self control as a human, how could she have an extraordinary amount as a vampire?? No out of control cravings... nothing? The author made her more in control than even Carlisle, who has been a vampire since the 17th century! So disappointing all around. Where was the struggle? The tragic flaw? Ugh!!! Now I kinda wish that Edward would have accidentally screwed Bella to death. At least that would have made it more interesting... and beleivable actually.

If you MUST read this book, check it out of the library. Don't waste the cash.


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