New Moon







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This book purposefully parallelled Romeo and Juliet in many aspects, and that was interesting. Again the inner conflict and character struggles were fairly well played out. The character jumps to wrong conclusions several times in her self-consciousness, but who hasn't done that at one time or another?

This book increased in language and mature content (see Theme and Other Items of Note) and so earns itself a Strongly Cautioned rating.



New Moon (Book Two in the Twilight Saga),
by Stephanie Meyer


563 pages

Summary: When the Cullens, including her beloved Edward, leave Forks rather than risk revealing that they are vampires, it is almost too much for eighteen-year-old Bella to bear, but she finds solace in her friend Jacob until he is drawn into a "cult" and changes in terrible ways.


THEMES: Vampires; werewolves; high school; Romeo and Juliet; suicide attempts; depression; co-dependency


FOUL LANGUAGE: ZERO occurrences


SOFT LANGUAGE (heard on cable TV): 20 occurrences [ 6 "hell" as an expletive, 6 D-words, 8 C-words]


VIOLENCE: Edward the male lead character asks for help in taking his life when he thinks that Bella is dead. When refused he plans a suicide attempt.


There is an old "royal" family of vampires who bring in unsuspecting guests, for dinner. Literally. This is not revealed in a glamorous light, nevertheless it is present.


There is verbal cruelty among some of the characters where they wound one another with the things that they say, this is usually regretted later, however.


SEXUAL CONTENT: Because the couple are separated for a good majority of the book, we do not see the indulgent intimacy to the extent that we did in the last book, until the end.

During their separation Bella spends a lot of time with her best friend, Jacob. Though she knows he has feelings for her she needs his comfort stronger than she wants to protect his heart. She toys with "making him belong to her" just so that she can keep him around, even though she doesn't love him as much as Edward.

Later, as in the first book, what is especially concerning is that when Bella and Edward are together, she can tell when Edward is "thirsty" because of the color of his eyes, and she knows that her scent is an exceptional temptation to him and yet she does not protect him or herself by keeping a mature and safe distance, or maintaining some modest integrity. He constantly has to push her away in order to save her life.

This is a situation that I would hope young Christians would not emulate in their own perseverance in purity. Love is not love when you cause the object of your affection to stumble and lust.


DRUG USE: ZERO occurences, though Bella's blood is described as having a siren call over Edward and smelling like his own personal brand of heroin. I don't think anyone under wise counsel would encourage a recovering drug addict to inhale, hug and kiss a heroin pipe and then set it aside only when it becomes too much of a temptation to indulge entirely in your addiction.

Very foolish. We are exhorted to "watch and pray so that [we] will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the body is weak." (Matthew 26:41) The measure of our faith is not how close we can get to sin without crossing the line, but how well, by the grace of God, we flee from it.


BLASPHEMY: ZERO occurrences of using God's name as an expletive.


REFERENCES TO AND GENERAL ATTITUDE TOWARD GOD: There are conversations that necessitate the existence of God, and yet they mostly avoid any truth.


pg. 36 there is a discussion between Carlisle (Edward's adopted father) and Bella. He says that in his nearly four hundred years he's never seen anything to make him doubt whether God exists in some form or the other. (see Romans 1:18-32, and James 2:19-- this general belief is not enough to save. Even the demons believe God exists, and they tremble. Yet they are still condemned.)

Bella admits that her life is fairly void of belief.

Carlisle hits the final nail when he says, "But I hope, maybe foolishly, that we'll get some measure of credit for trying."

That is salvation by works. No one can earn their way into God's kingdom by good behavior. Only salvation by grace, through faith, by repentance and clinging to the cross with the strength that the indwelling Holy Spirit supplies to those who are the Lord's.


There is a point where Edward says that claiming that he didn't love Bella was "the very blackest kind of blasphemy". I think they've confused the meaning of blasphemy. Unger's Bible Dictionary explains that blasphemy signifies the speaking of evil of God, to curse the name of the Lord, or to give the attributes of God to a creature.

Bella is guilty of this every time she speaks of Edward's "perfection". No one is perfect, but God.


OTHER ITEMS OF NOTE: There is an alarming aversion to marriage by the main character, Bella. Granted her parents made a mess of their marriage, and her mother drilled it into her to take marriage seriously and not marry too early. That is sound advice to an extent, but the character has made the mistake of making "marriage" the bad guy even though she has firmly professed her undying love for Edward and her intent to commit herself to him for "eternity" (a promise she cannot keep as a human). She has, as a result, a skewed and unhealthy view of the marriage covenant.


There is the continued admission that the characters (Bella and Edward) do not have the discipline to not do potentially hurtful things to the people they claim to love, and therefore they write off even trying for the sake of selfish indulgence. (pg. 513 is an example)


Bella repeatedly breaks her father's explicitly stated household rules, contending that she is legally an adult and threatens to move out (visibly hurting her father with the threat) whenever he tries to discipline or admonish her. Though she regrets hurting him, she feels completely justified in dishonoring him in this way.


on pg. 514 Edward tells Bella: "I'm not as stong as you give me credit for. Right and wrong have ceased to mean much to me."

Not a great message to be feeding the youth.


There is also a terrible amount of co-dependency happening between the two characters, setting the reader up to believe that when they fall in love, they will not be able to function with any degree of joy if the person they love is not with them. And that if they die there is no reason to go on living.


There is an ongoing struggle between the characters since Bella wants to become a vampire so that she can live forever with Edward, and he doesn't want her to become a vampire because he fears that you lose your soul when you become one, thus forfeiting heaven.


When the characters reunite, Bella foolishly states, "If you stay, I don't need heaven." (pg. 547) This elevates Edward in his importance and worth far above the value of being in the presence of God to worship Him and enjoy Him forever. I hope that this tragic (and ultimately evil) attitude never takes up residence in the hearts or minds of young Believers because it has been presented as sentimental and sweet in this book.



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1 Response
  1. This was the impression I got from the interview I heard last year... (the one I mentioned in my previous comment) That the author was taking subjects and situations that the Bible declares to be sinful - and playing them off as harmless to the young reader...

    VERY dangerous indeed because of the potential that it has for giving them the wrong impression of who God is, and what the gospel and the cross are for...

    Thank you again Christa - keep 'em coming!

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