Chattanooga Times Free Press

Stephenie Meyer is telling Edward’s story, even if it makes her anxious

- BY CONCEPCIÓN DE LEÓN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

When Stephenie Meyer decided this year to release “Midnight Sun,” a retelling of her best-selling “Twilight” novel from the vampire’s point of view, she thought: “No one can possibly care about it anymore.”

She put the book on hold after several chapters leaked online in 2008. Now, more than a decade later, her legions of fans are finally able to read it. She had hoped for a low-key release, but when she announced the publicatio­n date in May, so many of them flocked to her website that it quickly crashed.

“That’s really flattering but also nerve-wracking,” Meyer said in an interview last month. “I’m pretty sure people aren’t going to get exactly what they think they’re getting. Because of all the time that’s passed, they’ve built up in their minds what they thought it was going to be, and so no one can live up to those kinds of expectatio­ns.”

The Twilight saga, which follows teenage Bella Swan’s romance with Edward Cullen, a century-old vampire, turned into a multimilli­on-dollar brand following the first book’s release in 2005, producing five movies and millions of devotees around the world, many of whom have been clamoring for “Midnight Sun.”

Before its publicatio­n, Meyer talked about the stress of releasing a book during a pandemic, what readers can expect and why they shouldn’t be waiting for another one in Edward’s voice. These are edited excerpts from the conversati­on.

Q: Why did you decide to publish the book now?

A: Because I finished it. The reason it wasn’t published earlier was because it was not done, and when I did see the light at the end of the tunnel — when I saw that I was actually going to be able to finish it — I started the publicatio­n process right away, because I knew there were people who had been waiting really kindly and patiently, but also anxiously, for quite a while.

And then COVID-19 happens. And so do we put it out still? It became quickly obvious that there wasn’t a real end in sight with COVID. I am really excited when I have a book to read right now, because there’s not much else that’s exciting. I hoped people would feel the same way.

Q: What do readers have to look forward to in this new installmen­t?

A: The things that I enjoy most about it are — I liked not being the human being. I like that experience, stripping away your humanity and getting to be something other.

I think the part that people won’t expect is: Edward is a very anxious character. Writing him made me more anxious, and that’s one of the reasons it was hard to be in that story. His anxiety combined with mine was potent. He starts off fairly confident, but boy does he get broken down by the end. Bella really breaks him into pieces. I think he comes across in “Twilight” being very strong and so super sure of himself, when that never was really actually the case.

Q: Without giving away any spoilers, is there anything you can say about what readers will learn about Edward or what new perspectiv­es they’ll gain on moments in the “Twilight” book?

A: I mean, it’s difficult to spoil this book, because spoiler: Edward falls in love with Bella. That’s all known, so it’s difficult to spoil it.

The stuff they’re going to get that’s new is, like I said, the inhuman point of view and then the time away. The best parts to write, hands down, were the times that Bella was not present, and I wasn’t locked into a certain set of dialogues and actions. That was when I felt he could be more himself.

Some people are going to like some characters more, and they’re going to like some characters less, because not only is he spending time with them that way, but he is reading their minds all the time. It’s a reflex reaction for him, he can’t control it, so you get, not just a picture of people, you get the full story all the time, which is kind of overwhelmi­ng. I think you get a sense of how overwhelmi­ng it would be to constantly have people’s voices in your head.

Q: Do you plan to write the whole series through Edward’s eyes?

A: No. Not at all. This is it for Edward. Writing from his point of view makes me extra anxious. And the experience of writing this book was not a super pleasant one. So no, I wouldn’t want to do that — especially given that “New Moon” would just be a nightmare of depression and emptiness. I think this gives you enough of a sense of what it’s like to be Edward that you could go and look at the other books and you would know what’s going on in his head.

Q: A lot has changed in the world since the first book was published in 2005, including the #MeToo movement, which has cast a new light on a lot of our most beloved cultural institutio­ns. Have you thought about how Bella and Edward’s relationsh­ip might be perceived differentl­y today, almost two decades later?

A: I’ve had feedback from the very beginning with people who reacted to some things and didn’t like them at all, which I absolutely can see. I don’t know if “Midnight Sun” will make that better or worse for them.

I feel like you get the sense of him from the perspectiv­e of him not being someone who follows human rules. And the worst of it isn’t that, you could say, he spies on her. Really he’s just like a very curious animal who doesn’t think of it that way. But really the real problem is that he’s murdered a ton of people — that’s the worst thing, right, that you’re a murderer many times over.

And again, that comes from the fact that this is a fiction book that’s not even set in a realistic world. It’s fantasy, and so you have this character who’s not human and who isn’t part of the social things that we do. He’s different. That doesn’t change the fact that for somebody who experience­d something terrible that this might feel horrible for them, and that I feel bad about, because for me it’s just a fantasy that doesn’t exist. It hasn’t been my experience, and so it just feels like this totally other world.

Q: What do you plan on writing next?

A: I have, like, three candidates right now. I work on them occasional­ly. When “Midnight Sun” is out and that’s passed, then I’ll see which one is pulling me in. I’d like to do something in

fantasy fantasy, where you have to have a map in the beginning of the book, but we’ll see if that’s the one that gets picked.

 ?? PHOTO BY ERIC CHARBONNEA­U/INVISION/AP IMAGES ?? Taylor Lautner, writerprod­ucer Stephenie Meyer and Robert Pattinson at the world premiere of “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2” at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on Nov. 12, 2012.
PHOTO BY ERIC CHARBONNEA­U/INVISION/AP IMAGES Taylor Lautner, writerprod­ucer Stephenie Meyer and Robert Pattinson at the world premiere of “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2” at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on Nov. 12, 2012.

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