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Publication date 2 August 2008 (USA) 4 August 2008 (UK, AUS) Media type Print (Hardcover, Paperback) e-Book Audio Book (CD) Pages 756 (hardcover) Preceded by Breaking Dawn is the fourth novel in by American author. Divided into three parts, the first and third sections are written from 's perspective and the second is written from the perspective of. The novel directly follows the events of the previous novel, as Bella and get married, leaving behind a heartbroken Jacob.

When Bella faces unexpected and life-threatening situations, she willingly risks her human life and possible vampire immortality. Meyer finished an outline of the book in 2003, but developed and changed it as she wrote and, though the main and most significant storylines remained unchanged. Took certain measures to prevent the book's contents from leaking, such as closing forums and message boards on several fansites and providing a special e-mail address for fans to send in links to leaks and spoilers online. Breaking Dawn was released on August 2, 2008 at midnight release parties in over 4,000 bookstores throughout the US. From its initial print run of 3.7 million copies, over 1.3 million were sold in the US and 20,000 in the UK in the first 24 hours of the book's release, setting a record in first-day sales performance for the.

The book was highly successful, selling over 6 million copies in 2008, and was the third best-selling novel of 2008 behind and New Moon. Unlike the series' previous two entries, Breaking Dawn received mixed reviews from critics. It is also the most controversial book of the series, as adult themes and concepts are explored more directly than in its predecessors. However, the novel was awarded the for 'Children's Book of the Year'. It was translated in 38 languages with rights sold to over 50 countries. The book has been adapted into a two-part movie, with the released on November 18, 2011 and the released on November 16, 2012.

Contents. Plot summary Breaking Dawn is divided into three separate parts. The first part details Bella's marriage and honeymoon with Edward, which they spend on Isle Esme, a private island that Carlisle bought for Esme, off the coast of Brazil. Two weeks into their honeymoon, Bella realizes that she is pregnant with a half-vampire, half-human child and that her condition is progressing at an unnaturally accelerated rate. After contacting Carlisle, who confirms her pregnancy, she and Edward immediately return home to Forks, Washington, where the fetus continues to develop at an abnormal speed. The second part of the book is written from the perspective of Jacob Black, a werewolf who had also fallen in love with Bella.

A month after the wedding, Bella calls her father, Charlie Swan, and says that she is sick. Charlie relays this to Billy Black, Jacob's father, and Billy relays it to the pack. Jacob thinks that Bella is now a vampire and attempts to lead an assault on the Cullens for breaking the treaty.

When he arrives, he discovers that Bella is sick, but it is from her pregnancy, not a disease. Jacob begs Bella to abort the fetus and save her life, but Bella is determined that she will live long enough to have the baby and be transformed into a vampire. Jacob runs off in his werewolf form and keeps thinking of what Bella had said. This accidentally reveals Bella's condition to the pack, and because they think the baby will become a monster, the pack decides to kill the baby and Bella immediately.

Jacob refuses, and when Sam uses an alpha command to force Jacob, Jacob accepts his bloodline as the true leader of the pack and breaks free of Sam's control. He runs off to warn the Cullens of the pack's plan to kill Bella. However, while en route, Seth Clearwater, one of the younger pack members, joins Jacob and makes note of the fact that neither of them can hear the others' thoughts and that they had formed their own pack. They warn the Cullens and take up patrol around the Cullens' property. Leah, Seth's older sister, joins them shortly afterward. After a chance remark by Jacob, they discover that the baby simply craves blood, and Bella has to drink it out of a cup for the greatest effectiveness. Bella gets better, but the fetus grows swiftly and the timing of birth is unknown due to the lack of any related medical knowledge on human-vampire births.

Carlisle, the experienced doctor, is out of the house to replenish blood supplies from a hospital blood bank when Bella falls, detaching the placenta and inducing labor. The baby breaks many of her bones, including her spine, and she loses massive amounts of blood.

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In order to save her life, Edward changes her into a vampire by injecting his venom into her heart. Jacob, thinking that Bella is dead, and blaming Bella's daughter Renesmee as the cause, tries to kill Renesmee. Instead, he 'imprints'—an involuntary response in which a shape-shifter finds his soul mate—on her.

The third section shifts back to Bella's perspective, describing Bella's painful transformation, waking to find herself changed into a vampire and enjoying her new life and abilities. However, the vampire Irina misidentifies Renesmee as an 'immortal child,' a child who has been turned into a vampire.

Because immortal children are uncontrollable, creating them has been outlawed by the Volturi. After Irina presents her allegations to the Volturi, they plan to destroy Renesmee and the Cullens. In an attempt to survive, the Cullens gather other vampire clans from around the world to stand as witnesses and prove to the Volturi that Renesmee is not an immortal child. Edward telepathically connects with Jacob and his Quileute pack, with the full realization of Jacob's imprint on Renesmee forging a new family connection of an unbreakable bond and mutual pact of protection between the Cullens and the Quileute, ending hatred between the races. As local and foreign vampires arrive, the Cullen house becomes the headquarters and training ground for the assorted vampires and the Quileute wolf packs. Bella's human ability shielded her from psychic powers, but as a vampire she learns she can project it to shield others in a wide radius, a secret weapon that neutralizes most of the Volturi's powers. Upon confronting the gathered Cullen allies and witnesses, the Volturi discover that they have been misinformed on Renesmee's identity, and execute Irina when she refuses to make a claim against the wolves for killing, trying unsuccessfully to instigate a full battle.

Additionally, brings up the Cullens' pact with the Quileute as allying with the vampires' sworn enemy, the, but it turns out the Quileutes are 'shapeshifters' that chose the form of giant wolves, and not Lycans. The Volturi remain undecided on whether Renesmee should be viewed as a threat to vampires' secret existence. At that time, Alice and Jasper, who had left prior to the gathering of the Cullen's allies, return with a Mapuche called Nahuel, a 150-year-old hybrid like Renesmee, and his biological aunt, Huilen.

Huilen tells of how her sister fell in love with a vampire and became pregnant with his child. She also shares that when Nahuel was born, he bit her and made her immortal. Nahuel demonstrates that the hybrids pose no threat, and the Volturi agree to leave the Cullens alone. Before the Volturi leave, he also informs them of his father's intent to create more hybrids to produce a 'super race.' While allowing them to deal with his father, Nahuel begs the Volturi to spare his sisters. The Cullens and their allies return to their homes in peace, accepting that the Volturi may one day return. When Edward and Bella are alone, she lets him read her mind for the first time, sharing her feelings about him from her memories.

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Background Development Originally, Meyer wrote a book titled Forever Dawn, which was a direct sequel to Twilight. While the basic storyline remained the same, Forever Dawn was narrated completely from Edward's point of view, the werewolves and Jacob were 'only sketchily developed', Victoria and Laurent were both alive, and there was an epilogue. Meyer went on to say that she 'may post some extras someday if I ever have time to go back through the Forever Dawn manuscript—it's just as long as Breaking Dawn.' The part that took Meyer the longest time to write of Breaking Dawn was the half-chapter describing the 3 months after Bella's transformation into a vampire because 'the amount of time per word put into that section was probably ten times what it was in any other part of the book' and Meyer liked to write minute by minute, but didn't think it would be exciting. Meyer decided to include the pregnancy in her story while she was researching vampires, early in 2003, and came across the legend of the, a demon who could father children. Bella's insistence to not let her child die was inspired by Meyer's reaction when asked if she would let one of her children die so she could live, which was to deliver the child no matter what the consequences were. Meyer said in an interview with, published in, that the birth scene published is a little less grotesque than the one she wrote before editing due to her editor, agent and publisher's requests to 'tone down the violence a little'.

She stated that Bella's pregnancy and childbirth, for her, were 'a way to kind of explore that concept of what childbirth used to be' in the past and acknowledged that they were 'taking Bella in a new direction that wasn't as relatable for a lot of people.' Concerning the subject of the relatability of Bella, Meyer admitted that she lost some of her relatability to the character when she became a vampire and said, 'every point up until that point in the story the transformation I would say I could step into this story right here and I could do everything she could do which made it really fun.' Meyer wanted to experience Bella's vampiric experiences and 'enjoyed very much' writing about them and wanted to end the book from her perspective, but still thought it was 'a little bit harder' as she couldn't step in into the story anymore. In regard to Renesmee's unique name, Meyer wrote that she 'couldn't call her Jennifer or Ashley.

What do you name the most unique baby in the world? I looked through a lot of baby name websites. Eventually I realized that there was no human name that was going to work for me, so I surrendered to necessity and made up my own.'

Meyer states in regard to ending the series: The Twilight Saga is really Bella's story, and this was the natural place for her story to wind up. She overcame the major obstacles in her path and fought her way to the place she wanted to be. I suppose I could try to prolong her story unnaturally, but it wouldn't be interesting enough to keep me writing. Stories need conflict, and the conflicts that are Bella-centric are resolved.

Influences The plays and by both influenced Breaking Dawn. Meyer decided that Alice would write her instruction to Bella on a page from The Merchant of Venice to give a clue that the final confrontation at the end of the book would be a mental one—not a physical battle—like the one at the end of the play. It also hints that the novel would have a happy ending for the couples, as in The Merchant of Venice.

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Originally it was the novel by that Alice tore a page from, but Jane Eyre had nothing to do with the story, so Meyer changed it. The idea of imprinting, which existed in Forever Dawn, was inspired by A Midsummer Night's Dream. Meyer described it as 'the magic of setting things right—which doesn't happen in the real world, which is absolutely fantasy', and decided to introduce it earlier–in Eclipse–so she wouldn't have to explain it later. Cover art Meyer described the cover as 'extremely meaningful' and said that she was 'really happy with how it turned out'.

The cover is a metaphor for Bella's progression throughout the entire series; she began as the physically weakest player on the board, the, but at the end she the strongest, the. The chessboard also hints at the conclusion of the novel 'where the battle with the Volturi is one of wits and strategy, not physical violence.'

Title The title, Breaking Dawn, is a reference to the beginning of Bella's life as a newborn vampire. Wanting to add a 'sense of disaster' to the title to match the novel's mood, she called it Breaking Dawn.

Another reason for giving the book this particular title is that it matches the book's plot, which centers on 'a new awakening and a new day and there's also a lot of problems inherent in it'. Release Marketing magazine released an excerpt of Breaking Dawn on May 30, 2008.

Stephenie Meyer also revealed a 'Quote of the Day' from Breaking Dawn for about three weeks prior to its August 2, 2008 release. The first quote was released on Meyer's website on July 12, 2008. The first chapter of Breaking Dawn, 'Engaged', was released in the special edition of. Breaking Dawn was officially released on August 2, 2008 through midnight release parties in over 4,000 bookstores, most of which involved costume and trivia contests, crafts, and face painting. Also made a Twilight-themed, which was released in book stores at the release parties.

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A four-city Breaking Dawn Concert Series, featuring Stephenie Meyer and 's, coincided with the novel's release. The concert series sold out three of its four locations on the day that tickets went on sale, selling out in under an hour in one city. Publication Prior to the novel's release, the first three Twilight books had already sold 8.5 million copies throughout the US and over 2 million copies in the UK.

Breaking Dawn was one of the most anticipated books of 2008 with noting, 'Teenagers across the world are anxiously awaiting the next instalment of author Stephenie Meyer's vampiric series of novels.' To meet the high demand, added a printing of 500,000 additional copies just prior to publication of the title, bringing initial print run to 3.7 million. The book sold 1.3 million copies in the US and 20,000 copies in the UK in its first 24 hours of release, as well as 100,000 copies in Canada during its first weekend. Breaking Dawn debuted at #1 on 's top 150 best sellers list and has gone on to spend over 58 weeks on the list. It was also the biggest-selling children's book of 2008 with over 6 million copies sold.

A special edition of Breaking Dawn was released on August 4, 2009, containing a DVD of the Breaking Dawn Concert Series and an interview with Meyer. Reception Critical reception of Breaking Dawn was mixed. Wrote, 'First, since there's a lot of one-star reviews up on Amazon, let me say up front: I loved Breaking Dawn.' Cara von Wrangel Kinsey of responded with a positive review, describing the book as 'captivating' and noting, 'While this novel is darker and more mature than the earlier titles, Meyer's twists and turns are not out of character.'

Agreed and called the book 'pretty darned good', but criticized the book's length saying, 'I wish Stephenie Meyer hadn't felt compelled to pack so much into one volume. It should have been two books.' Mary Harris Russell of the also responded with a positive review and hailed the book as a 'fun read', noting that Stephenie Meyer 'continues to produce witty writing about families, teenagers and popular culture', while called the book 'a wild but satisfying finish to the ballad of Bella and Edward' and gave it a rating of A. An article in said of Breaking Dawn, 'Some of the dialog is a bit stilted. But, if you stay close to Meyer's rich and prodigious narrative, you too might fall in love with its suspense and moving sensitivity'. Stated that the main problem with Breaking Dawn was that, 'Essentially, everyone gets everything they want, even if their desires necessitate an about-face in characterization or the messy introduction of some back story.

Nobody has to renounce anything or suffer more than temporarily—in other words, grandeur is out.' In an article by, journalist Sara Rose wrote on NewsOK.com that fans of the series would love 'engaging characters, great humor, a distracting obsession with beauty, focus on the minutiae of emotions'; however 'casual readers may be disappointed with a lot of build-up and little action.' Called the book, 'shockingly, tackily, sick-makingly sexist' and said that 'Bella Swan lives to serve men and suffer.' Graded Breaking Dawn with a D, criticizing the birth scene and Bella's 'unwavering passion for Edward' and having no other goals. Also responded with a negative review, making comments such as, 'Meyer has put a stake through the heart of her own beloved creation,' and ' Breaking Dawn has a childbirth sequence that may promote lifelong abstinence in sensitive types.' In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Meyer responded to the negative response of many fans to the book and called it the 'Rob Effect'; she said that the fans need time to accept the ending of Breaking Dawn, just as they needed time to accept playing the role of Edward in the Twilight movie.

Awards and honors Breaking Dawn was the recipient of a for 'Children's Book of the Year'. In the 2009 'Children's Choice Book Awards', the novel was chosen as 'Teen Choice Book of the Year' and Meyer won the 'Author of the Year' award. Film adaptations. Main articles: and announced in November 2008 that they had obtained the rights to the fourth book in 's series, Breaking Dawn. The studio greenlit an adaptation of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn in April 2010. The film was split into two parts; the first part of the film was released on November 18, 2011, and the second part was released on November 16, 2012. Directed both parts; Stephenie Meyer co-produced the film along with Karen Rosenfelt and.

In July 2010, Summit announced that the film would be shot in Vancouver, Canada, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Plays the part of Irina in the film, while plays Renesmee, Edward and Bella's child.

The infant Renesmee was portrayed by a robot. It was filmed at the. The film did not follow the book strictly, as many of the scenes were created from scratch to add tension to the narrative. References. ^ Dan Glaister & Sarah Falconer (2008-07-20). London: The Observer. Retrieved 2009-09-19.

^ Jim Milliot (2008-08-04). Archived from on 2008-12-17. Retrieved 2008-10-18.

Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. (April 2011).

'A Conversation with Shannon Hale, On Finding Story Ideas'. The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide. Little, Brown and Company. Twilight Lexicon. Retrieved July 6, 2011. (April 2011).

'A Conversation with Shannon Hale, On Breaking Dawn'. The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide. Little, Brown and Company. Twilight Lexicon. Retrieved July 6, 2011. Retrieved June 1, 2011. (April 2011).

'A Conversation with Shannon Hale, On Literary Inspirations'. The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide.

Little, Brown and Company. (April 2011).

'A Conversation with Shannon Hale, On Literary Inspirations'. The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide.

Little, Brown and Company. Twilight Lexicon. Retrieved July 7, 2011. (April 2011).

'Frequently Asked Questions'. The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide.

Little, Brown and Company. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Lauren Wilson (2008-07-31). Retrieved 2009-09-19.

Retrieved 2008-09-07. Elizabeth Fox (2008-07-29). Archived from on 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2008-09-10.

Maxine Shen (2008-07-13). Retrieved 2008-09-10. Little, Brown. Retrieved 2009-09-19. Alison Flood (2008-09-23). London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-09-19.

Retrieved 2009-09-19. Retrieved 2009-09-19. Diane Roback (2009-03-23). Publishers Weekly. Archived from on October 8, 2012. Retrieved 2009-09-19.

Retrieved 2009-11-15. Lev Grossman (2008-08-04). Retrieved 2009-09-19. Cara von Wrangel (2008-08-11).

School Library Journal. Retrieved 2009-09-19.

Lilah Lohr (2008-08-12). The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved 2009-09-19. Mary Harris Russell (2008-08-09). Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2009-09-19. Retrieved 2009-09-19.

Margaret Smith (2008-08-12). Retrieved 2008-09-07.

Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-09-07. Hand, Elizabeth (2008-08-10).

The Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-09-07.

Retrieved 2008-09-07. Hephzibah Anderson (2009-04-03). Retrieved 2009-04-11.

Children's Book Council. Archived from on May 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-14. Steven Zeitchik (2008-11-14). The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from on December 4, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-13.

Retrieved 2011-06-19. Retrieved 2011-06-19. Nicole Sperling (2010-04-28). Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2010-04-28.

Retrieved 2010-09-28. External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:.