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New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)

New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)Author: Stephenie Meyer
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

List Price: $10.99
Buy Used: $2.45
as of 11/24/2009 10:35 CST details
You Save: $8.54 (78%)



New (251) Used (716) from $2.45

Seller: bensantos13
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2099 reviews
Sales Rank: 20

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Young Adult
Pages: 608
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0316024961
EAN: 9780316024969
ASIN: 0316024961

Publication Date: May 31, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Great Condition!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 11-15 of 2099



4 out of 5 stars Interesting events in the Twilight Saga, but not the best in the series   November 16, 2009
J. Carangal (Maryland USA)
I loved Twilight and Eclipse. I greatly enjoyed Breaking Dawn. But the first time I read New Moon I liked it, but didn't love it. I have now re-read it and enjoyed it much more the 2nd time around.

In this book, Bella's frienship with Jacob evolves and she learns about the history of the Quilette people. During the time Bella spends with Jacob the reader is drawn into the dynamic of the "gang" of young men on the reservation who all seem to be changing to become the "protectors" of their people. I enjoyed reading about their lives and the "pack" mentality of the group. I was glad the "void" left by the vampires was filled by this story line.

But in the end, I loved reading about the Volturi and finding out about the powers of the vampires who act as the "enforcers" of the vamp community. Each vampire in Italy was unique and presented a new look into the history and lives of the vampires.

And of course I love Alice .... "How do you feel about grand theft auto?"
First time through I was disappointed the book was not about Bella and Edwards. Second tiem I read it, I appreciated the story line that leads Bella to better understand Jacob and his friends.



3 out of 5 stars The weakest of the series   November 15, 2009
Roxie (Los Angeles)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is the weakest of the Twilight series. My main problem with it is that one of the protagonists, Edward, disappears like five pages into the book. Sucks for Bella. I do agree with many posts on here that Bella appears weak and pathetic, etc., etc., but unfortunately, that is teen angst for you. Meyers characterizes some of these things as fatal flaws with some of her characters--they make poor decisions (I mean, don't we all?), and suffer the consequences. Bella being so totally into and dependent on Edward is one of those flaws. Edward being a ninny, and leaving Bella just to 'save' her from him is a poor decision as well, characterized by his intense desire to protect her from anything that might hurt her...even him (SPOILER, but this definitely plays out in Breaking Dawn, with the pregnancy).

Enter Jacob Black. So I am definitely a member of Team Edward, but Jacob is the perfect foil for both Edward AND Bella. In Meyer's explanation, Jacob is the only one who is flawless--has no character defects, except maybe caring too much about the people in his life, and accepting them-warts and all-for who they are. He provides protection, guidance, a shoulder to cry on, etc. He is clear about what he wants, and puts up with Bella in her indecisiveness and ultimately, choice to turn her back on him. Again, SPOILER, but I thought it perfect and ironic that he ends up with her daughter in the end.

Whatever you want to make of Edward and Bella's relationship, it is driven by passion; albeit the passionate and perhaps thoughtless actions of 17 and 18 years old, remember, but passion nonetheless. Jacob's entry into the triangle makes that passion play out even further - Jacob's passion and concern for Bella, and his passionate HATRED of Edward. So great.

So yes, New Moon was not my favorite of the series at all, but if Meyers purposely wrote Edward out of this chapter to bring the relationships around full circle and to conclusiveness later on, she definitely succeeded.



1 out of 5 stars Not Giving New Moon To Nieces   November 13, 2009
Sherry L. D'ambrosio (Norfolk VA, USA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I've been reading a lot lately so sharing more reviews with you. I know I'm going to get blasted for my opinion of New Moon by Stephenie Meyer, but I just have to be honest.

When I first heard of Stephanie Meyers' Twilight series, I wasn't much interested. Teen vampire love story. Uh huh. But everyone talked about it so much that when a copy of Twilight turned up on a shelf at my local thrift store, I thought, "Why not?" What was I losing for $0.45? Interview With A Vampire by Anne Rice spoiled me. What a rich re-visioning of the vampire myth! So well told, beautifully written. And Louis! Ah who can forget Louis? Even Rice's later vampire novels could not compete with the place Interview has in my affections, although I found LeStat entertaining enough. How would Twilight compare?

Teen girl, something of misfit, falls in love with mysterious boy who just happens to be a vampire. As I read, I kept wondering why so many people were raving about the character, Bella. I didn't find her at all appealing. In part that could be due to her low self-confidence and habit of always putting herself down. But for me, the bigger issue was that she didn't seem to be about anything. I couldn't have told you what her values were or what she wanted out of life except for her obvious desire to be liked by the mysterious Edward whose handsome appearance is always foremost in her mind and her descriptions of him. The characters had the potential to be interesting but just weren't developed well enough for me to care about them. And Twilight was less a vampire story than a twist on Romeo and Juliet. As far as action and plot development, let's just say it was like watching a film in slow motion.

Now why, since I obviously wasn't impressed with Twilight, would I pick up the second installment, New Moon? I had no plans of buying it. Then I had a doctor's appointment scheduled and went searching for something to take along to read. Turned out I'd actually managed to get to the bottom of all the various waiting-to-be-read stacks around the house. I found one book I hadn't read but it was non-fiction of the sort requiring concentration; definitely not brain candy and I find brain candy is best for waiting rooms. Since I had to stop at the pharmacy on my way to the doctor, I checked the books on the their shelves. Nothing appealed to me and I was going to walk out but the thought of sitting in that waiting room for what might be a long while caused me to take a last look. I saw New Moon and snatched it up with a sigh. At least it wasn't heavy reading.

I don't know whether I was simply used to Bella or whether she was actually less annoying the second time around but I disliked her less. Except - and this is a big one for me - the girl was beyond hopelessly in love with Edward. Bella had lost all sense of herself as a person without Edward's presence. I hate that the young girls for whom this series is a favorite are reading this love story and perhaps learning how to obliterate themselves, how to vanish into the shadow of some male they choose as all important. Over and over again Bella and, yes, Edward, too was ready to give up everything if s/he couldn't be with the other. Is this really what we want our daughters to be learning? I think of friends who entered relationships that faltered and fell apart. What happens afterward? Those with a healthy sense of self pull their lives back together and go on, often to better things. Those who negated much of their self to mollify their partner usually fall apart when the one they thought of as "everything" no longer has use for them. The one left behind often is in a position of having, in essence, to establish a new self image.

Aside from the unhealthy lesson I see there, what else can I say about New Moon? Although the characters don't develop much more I did feel there was some improvement. There was more of a sense of the Cullens being a family with believable family loyalties based on interest in and concern for one another rather than just a connection as vampires. I liked the way Meyers wove in the legend of the werewolves. However, I found myself laughing out loud as I envisioned the "exploding" that took place as the Indians lads transformed to werewolves. This made me picture the old Incredible Hulk cartoons. The Volturi were an interesting touch - the veneer of civility over the horror one expects in a vampire story; now there was a vampire story to be told there. And there was, relatively speaking, more action than in Twilight.

All in all, perhaps satisfying brain candy for the pre-teen, teen set. However, my nieces won't be receiving copies from me.



1 out of 5 stars This is the book for you if.....   November 13, 2009
Sea Shell (Mid-Atlantic Region, USA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

If you enjoy reading about a teen girl moping for many, many, many pages, this is the book for you.

And if vampires are not enough fun (?), how about werewolves? You got 'em. This is the book for you.

If you like animated corpses, this is the book for you. Edward is still like marble and stone, still cold and icy, and Bella loves it. It must be like sleeping next to a statue. Yes, he still sneaks into her room at night and they cuddle, and Bella still hides this from her father and lies a lot to him.

If you like teen love stories where the girl wants to give up her family, friends, soul, and humanity to be with her "man" (actually, the dead Edward turned vampire), this is the book for you.

All in all, it's poorly written, has a very contrived plot, is mostly boring, and has very harmful messages about love. If you like those things, this is the book for you.








1 out of 5 stars Perhaps the worst book I ever forced myself to finish   November 11, 2009
R. T. Wilcoxon
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I was late to the Twilight series. I bought all 4 books at once after friends told me how great they were (good thing for Stephanie Meyer because I would definitely not bought another one after this if I didn't already have them).

I thought Twilight was an average book that got better and better by the end. I felt Meyer definitely hit her stride. It left me with great hope for New Moon. Sadly that hope was misplaced. This book felt like Meyer wrote the story in about 150 pages but realized she need a bigger book to make the fans happy. So she quickly added about 350 pages saying nothing more than Bella's moping around whining about how beautiful Edward and his family is, how plain she is, how lucky she was to have spent any time with him at all because he is just that amazing and she didn't deserve it, how it "left a whole in her chest" repeated about 100 times, blah, blah, blah. It turned what could have a character everybody could relate to into a self-loathing, pathetic, whimpering, annoying brat. Not only did it successfully turn fans against the main character, it was a complete waste of time.

I was going to stop reading the series but a friend encouraged me to read the next book. Since I already bought it, I did. Thankfully, it is the best book in the series...but nothing good can be said about New Moon.


Showing reviews 11-15 of 2099



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