Write About Now

twilight zone

twilightcoverIn a February USA Weekend interview, author Stephen King compared “Harry Potter” novelist J.K. Rowling and recent phenomenon Stephenie Meyer. “The real difference is that Jo Rowling is a terrific writer and Stephenie Meyer can’t write worth a darn,” he summed up. “She’s not very good.”

In case you are a man without a wife, sister, mother or teenage daughter, Meyer is the author of Twilight and its three follow-up young adult novels about a teenage girl named Bella and her vampire boyfriend Edward. Meyer’s books have been translated into 20 languages, sold 22 million copies just in 2008, and took spots 1-4 on last year’s best-seller list. That’s right, the Twilight series monopolized all four top spots last year.

The only good thing about this is it pushed The Shack to #6. Because King is right—the books aren’t very good. They include run-on sentences even the most junior editor should have caught, repetitive descriptions (we know Edward is hot because his eyes blaze, scorch, or smolder most of the time), and a whole lot of melodrama.

But just as people don’t visit Hard Rock Cafe for high-quality food, people aren’t reading Twilight for high-quality prose–they’re reading for the love story. Meyer has created every woman’s ideal man: mind-bogglingly handsome, funny, intelligent, articulate. He dotes on Bella’s every word and every mood swing. He’s got piles of money, a shiny Volvo, and nothing but time. (He is immortal.) Most of all, he’s Bella’s protector in a way no real man could be, able to run at lightning speed, read thoughts, and stop out of control cars with one hand.

When Charlotte asserted “Women just really want to be rescued” on an episode of Sex and the City, the other women at the table looked at her like she spit in their coffee. This desire to be cared for and protected is one of the few off-limits topics among modern women, because it’s something we’re not supposed to want. We can open that door, schlep that luggage, and fund that retirement account ourselves, thank you. But one or more of these books has been on the NYT bestseller list for years. We may not admit this desire, but we’re spending an awful lot of money to read about its fulfillment for someone else.

Perhaps it’s because God created us this way, and no amount of equal pay (which I firmly support) or power pantsuits (which I don’t) can negate it. The healthy expression of this inner wiring doesn’t include vampires and shouldn’t include victimization; it’s less “rescue” and more regard for our differences as women. For our part, it also includes recognition of men’s equally-unique role as provider and protector.

And, I think, the end of apologies for wanting that. We stopped waiting for the knight on a white horse a long time ago, but the so-pale-he’s-white Edward still entrances us. The books may not be good, but they point us, however melodramatically, to something that is.

April 8, 2009 - Posted by | men and women, opinions | , , , , ,

5 Comments »

  1. Jen, I think you’ve nailed it. We should give our nature a chance to weigh-in on our thoughts, too, not just our intellects.

    Comment by Anna | April 8, 2009 | Reply

  2. GREAT post! I recently read that the current hot publishing trends are paranormal and inspirational/Christian. Light and darkness. Same age old stuff.
    Bless you,
    Laura

    Comment by laura frantz | April 10, 2009 | Reply

  3. well said!

    Comment by anna b | November 20, 2009 | Reply

  4. Love your post. Thanks for putting into words what I feel. The Twilight series was no more than a feel good serious for me. It also opened up some great conversations with my daughter.
    I am actually more curious about your thoughts on the “The Shack.” My friend who is struggling with where her faith lies suggested I read it. She said she read it and couldn’t put it down. I of course have had it for months now. I keep walking away from it because of so many doctrine(not the exact word I am looking for)issues. I am happy that my friend is searching. I want to maybe direct her to another book along with the Bible of course to encourage her. I want her to feel love and encouragement, definitely not discouragement.

    Comment by Keri (Quackenbush) Hoyt | November 20, 2009 | Reply

  5. If your friend is suggesting you read it, I’d read it (it’s super quick) just so you can have the discussion about it. It does have some doctrinally iffy things, but how will she know what they are unless you join the conversation? :)

    Then you will have earned the right to suggest another book that’s a bit deeper and (ahem) better written.

    Since you asked, I blogged about it here: http://writeaboutnow.christianstandard.com/2008/07/26/shacked-up/

    Comment by Jennifer | November 20, 2009 | Reply


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

Gravatar
WordPress.com Logo

Please log in to WordPress.com to post a comment to your blog.

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.