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Showing posts from January, 2018

Week Two: Vampires

For this week’s reading, I decided to read Twilight . I was a huge fan of the movies when I was in middle and high school, but it has been a long time since I read the first book of the saga. It was interesting returning to a book after so many years. I had to have been in 7 th  grade the last time I read this particular book. It was not my favorite of the series, so I only read it the once.               Reading Twilight as a kid and an adult is a completely different experience. As a kid, like I said, I was a huge fan. I accepted it all, holding onto every word, like Bella’s love life was as important as the book made it out to be. Don’t get me wrong, I am a huge sentimentalist and still adore these movies, although now acknowledging and even sharing the opinions of the critics. But, when reading the book last week, I was able, as an adult, to really separate myself from the book and try to analyze it for what it is really saying.               Twilight, at face value, is a mo

Week One: Frankenstein

We are all familiar with Frankenstein’s monster. He is a big disfigured soul, usually green, that is so repulsive, no one would give him the time of day. I have never read Frankenstein before this point and I was surprised it was nothing like the idea of Frankenstein that I came across growing up. The Frankenstein of my childhood was always presented as the misunderstood tortured soul that the village, even with pitchforks and torches at first in hand, eventually learn to accept. But this monster I read about in the book was truly rotten to the core. Yes, he went through hardships that he did not deserve and he did not ask for the life he was given. But he surely made the decision, out of pure vengeance, to kill the people that Frankenstein held dear. I am not saying that Frankenstein did the right thing by creating the Monster and that he does not hold some sort of responsibility to his creation, but rather that both Frankenstein and the Monster are both truly monsters in their own r