TIME’s article on Twilight and Stephenie Meyer is great.
What makes Meyer’s books so distinctive is that they’re about the erotics of abstinence. Their tension comes from prolonged, superhuman acts of self-restraint. There’s a scene midway through Twilight in which, for the first time, Edward leans in close and sniffs the aroma of Bella’s exposed neck. “Just because I’m resisting the wine doesn’t mean I can’t appreciate the bouquet,” he says. “You have a very floral smell, like lavender … or freesia.” He barely touches her, but there’s more sex in that one paragraph than in all the snogging in Harry Potter.
It’s never quite clear whether Edward wants to sleep with Bella or rip her throat out or both, but he wants something, and he wants it bad, and you feel it all the more because he never gets it. That’s the power of the Twilight books: they’re squeaky, geeky clean on the surface, but right below it, they are absolutely, deliciously filthy.
[...]
But as artists, they couldn’t be more different. Rowling pieces her books together meticulously, detail by detail. Meyer floods the page like a severed artery. She never uses a sentence when she can use a whole paragraph. Her books are big (500-plus pages) but not dense–they have a pillowy quality distinctly reminiscent of Internet fan fiction. (Which she’ll readily grant: “I don’t think I’m a writer; I think I’m a storyteller,” Meyer says. “The words aren’t always perfect.”)
All of the above are Trufax.

3 comments
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April 29, 2008 at 10:19 am
ciaomiao
Is there a reason that the TIME’s is comparing Meyer’s work to Rowling’s? Admittedly, I’ve not read either of them. Is HP just a convenient baseline to which most people can relate, or is this sinister HP propaganda?
April 30, 2008 at 9:06 pm
Aya
HP has become a bit of a baseline. And having one of the cast members from its 4th movie in the leading role of the Twilight movie probably isn’t helping. But really, the books have very little in common: a fantasy world set within our modern one, housemoms-turned-famous, and an insane fanbase. That’s about it.
I’m seriously in shock that you’ve never read Harry Potter. I could understand never having read Twilight, Twilight is never going to have its own amusement park. And Stephenie Meyer will probably never have the extra millions to drop on a charity like it’s change for a parking meter.
I’m going to leave my seven books bundled in a blanket outside your house. Attached will be the note: Please take care of my babies.
May 1, 2008 at 7:08 pm
ciaomiao
My not reading HP is the result of years of delicately cultivated avoidance. BUT. You introduced me to Neverwhere. So I owe you the benefit of doubt.