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Shining a light on ‘ Midnight Sun,’ the new ‘ Twilight’ book

- Morgan Hines

The highly anticipate­d “Midnight Sun,” the fifth book in the “Twilight” series, hit shelves Tuesday. The book focuses on a vampirehum­an love affair, the complexiti­es of which are more apparent to the vampiric party, as made evident in the book’s narration. h And that plot won’t be new to Twihards familiar with author Stephenie Meyer’s “Twilight,” which she expanded into three subsequent novels, “New Moon,” “Eclipse” and “Breaking Dawn.” h But this time, it’s told from vampire Edward Cullen’s perspectiv­e instead of Bella Swan’s and offers a more complex view of a high school romance. Cullen ( played by Robert Pattinson in the films), as the narrator, is a bit more worldly at 104 years old though he perpetuall­y appears to be 17 thanks to his vampire immortalit­y.

In May, when the book’s release date was announced, Meyer promised USA TODAY that the book would be “darker” and “more desperate,” and she didn’t disappoint. For Edward, everything is higher risk than it was for Bella ( played by Kristen Stewart in the movies) because he’s a vampire. His desire to at first kill Bella remains a problem even when he falls for her and prompts tension that stretches across the novel’s nearly 700 pages.

Here are six things “Midnight Sun” brings fans of “The Twilight Saga” that are new or noteworthy:

Other side of Edward and Bella’s romance is revealed

The conversati­ons and big moments of Edward and Bella Swan’s love story in “Midnight Sun” mirror those in “Twilight,” which many readers are likely to remember. They just come from a different viewpoint.

And as in any relationsh­ip, understand­ing both sides is revealing. There are instances of miscommuni­cation, jealousy, desire and more that culminate at the book’s climax as Bella becomes more and more a part of Edward’s world. He recognizes he’s dangerous to her though he can’t stay away as she’s his personal “brand of heroin,” as he describes in a conversati­on that occurs in both “Midnight Sun” and “Twilight.”

Cullen family history made clear

In “Twilight” we become acquainted with the Cullens at the same pace Bella does. But in “Midnight Sun,” readers get a deeper look into Edward’s non- biological family, who were brought together through a series of events that become clearer in his telling.

Each of the family members reads more complex, and their character flaws and bright spots more salient, giving readers a better understand­ing of the series on the whole. The Washington state town of Forks’ most mysterious family becomes even less of a mystery than when Bella gets to know them over the course of four other books.

In “Midnight Sun,” readers hear details Edward purpose fully leaves out in his explanatio­ns to Bella, including a scene in which he simplifies the early stages of his adopted father, Carlisle Cullen’s adjustment period after turning into a vampire, the struggles he endured and limited some details about the amplified human characteri­stics of his adopted vampire siblings.

Edward’s internal struggle is constant

It’s not quite a Jekyll and Hyde dynamic, but Edward’s internal struggle is evident in Meyer’s text.

As he gets closer to Bella, he frequently refers to “the monster,” a version of himself that could – and often instinctiv­ely wants to – hurt Bella. His worries about hurting her are made clear in the tellings from her perspectiv­e, too, but are deeper from his viewpoint.

He struggles with the idea of an internal monster that he has had to “beat back” over the decades without Bella, and it becomes harder to do so in her presence. But when he realizes his love for her has become more powerful than instinct, the sheer feeling of joy he expresses is immense – but it’s not enough to conquer the internal struggle.

Jacob Black is not absent from the text

Though he may not emerge in Edward’s world as quickly as he comes into Bella’s life in “Twilight,” Jacob Black, a family friend to Bella who becomes a werewolf in Meyer’s second book in the series, “New Moon,” and is romantical­ly interested in Bella from the get- go, is not absent from the text.

And though he is more of an annoyance to Edward than anything else, his interactio­ns with Bella that Edward is aware of allude to past and future tensions between the Cullens and the Quileute tribe, of which Jacob’s family is a part ( perhaps foreshadow­ing future books from Edward’s perspectiv­e).

Insight into Edward’s past

Edward’s personal history becomes more apparent in the new book. Readers get a chance to see him before he encounters Bella, when he was a new vampire in the early 20th century, how the Cullen family began to come together and other memories – some of which are dark and involve a god complex at times.

Some of the tales Edward shares were alluded to in the already published books but stop at the extent of Bella’s knowledge – or understand­ing of them. In “Midnight Sun,” Edward has an internal monologue about his own history, while talking to Bella or simply reflecting, and it reveals much more about his timeline and his personalit­y.

Readers get access to others’ minds as well

It’s no secret that Edward Cullen can “hear” other people’s thoughts. That’s part of what draws him to Bella in the first place, or rather, the frustratio­n that he can’t hear hers. But given that he’s the narrator, he has access to the personal thoughts of his family members, peers and enemies, as well.

With many of those mind- reading moments highlighte­d, the reader is allowed a deeper insight into the book’s characters and understand­ing of its narrative as a whole.

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