Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined Chapters 20 and 21

Last time on Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined…
We discovered that:
-Beau uses tube socks
-Red blotches + being a loner + tube socks = drugs
-Beau can sandblast his own throat
This time…
CHAPTER 20
The chapter begins with “When I woke up, I was confused.” Let’s be honest, Beau. When are you not confused?
As well, we get a description of the hotel that makes me feel that Stephenie Meyer hadn’t been to a hotel in quite a while before the success of Twilight. We are told that “The room was too bland to belong anywhere but a hotel. The bedside lamps were bolted to the tables, and the drapes were made from the same fabric as the bedspread.”
So not only have I never been to a hotel like this (personally it sounds more like a shady motel), but this boy knows that the bedspread and the drapes are made out of the exact same fabric. Not color. Not pattern. But fabric? This boy just woke his little ass up, confused, because don’t forget the chapter starts “When I woke up, I was confused”, but he now has the astute observations of an interior designer? Uh huh…
Archie (Alice), Jessamine (Jasper), and Beau made it to Phoenix, Arizona the day before. Beau recaps the drive. He looks over at the digital alarm clock where “The red numbers claimed it was three o’clock”. Claimed? It claimed it was three o’clock? This might be a small thing, but why so distrustful of digital clocks? It’s a hotel. I’m sure their clocks would be reasonably around the right time.
Archie gives updates on what is happening with the others. He explains his psychic abilities. Archie tells Beau that vampires have a venom that turn people into vampires. I could talk about the weirdness of that, but it’s in the original Twilight, and I’m sure that’s been talked about enough as is. Then Archie gets a vision that Joss (James) is took a plane and is now waiting in a room full of mirrors. Edythe and gang believe that Joss is flying back down to Forks after having been chased up to Vancouver.
Beau recognizes the description and realizes it to be the ballet studio that his mother used to teach dance lessons at. Now, this is the tricky thing about gender-bending. Are guys less likely to participate in feminine activities like ballet? Yes. However, part of gender-bending depends on knowing your character and knowing how that character would change according to being a different gender and living in a society that treats genders differently.
Yet, we have a protagonist that is known for not caring what other people think of her in Twilight. Wouldn’t that quality be the same if she were male? Or what having a mother who didn’t gender-bend who is quirky and a little bit off? Doesn’t she seem like the type that might have her son participate in her dance lessons?
I don’t know. I wouldn’t be so against this choice if the rest of the book hadn’t blatantly shown me that Beau is more masculine and manly simply because he is a dude and the world revolves around his need to be manly. Instead of blushing, he has a skin condition. Instead of realizing he is outmatched by vampires, he thinks he can protect his vampire girlfriend. Instead of a group of guys cornering him, he has a group of hobos with guns trying to kill him. And, alas, where are those hobos now? (I really want them to figure into the climax somehow.)
Beau tells them that the dance studio that Archie saw in his vision is right in Phoenix. What a coinkydink!Worried for his mom, he calls her phone, but she doesn’t answer. The chapter ends with Beau falling asleep, waiting for the phone to ring.
CHAPTER 21
Archie gets another vision of Joss, and Beau recognizes that Joss is in his mom’s house. Archie calls Edythe and tells Beau that Edythe is coming down and that Beau is going to be hidden away for “a while”. Of course, Beau is not worried that his life is essentially being put on hold, but worried about Edythe. God love him.
Thankfully, Jessamine uses her emotion ability to knock him the fuck out. Nightie night. For a minute. Then Beau acts like a baby and goes to his room and slams the door. ** rolls eyes ** While Jessamine didn’t fully put Beau to sleep, I appreciate Jessamine’s attempt enough not to question how an emotion ability can put someone to sleep (but if you want to feel free).
Then this really exciting thing happens: nothing. Don’t believe me? Here you go: “For almost four hours I sat on the floor and stared at the wall, my hands clenched into fists.” 
Four hours? Four freakin’ hours?! He literally could have better spent the time sleeping, and at this point, I would have been more interested. But don’t worry, even though he is doing nothing from staring at the wall, he is manly! Look at those clenched fists! They are so clenched! They are so…fist-y?
Beau then comes to the conclusion that “Maybe, if I could see her face again, I would be able to see a solution, too. Things were clearer when we were together.” Did you catch that? Do you understand what the problem is? Let me repeat it: “Things were clearer when we were together.” Uh…wasn’t the point of the last 330 pages to prove that things are not, in fact, clearer when you two are together?
Such as, I don’t know, not finding Edythe’s stalking scary or thinking you can take on a vampire. When, you might ask? Any of them. All of them. Pick a time. Pick a vampire. Remember, Beau, you are a baby seal. Baby. Seal.
Or maybe, I don’t know, this:
Actually, I had no idea if I was [hungry]. My whole body felt like it was being electrocuted in a strange and very pleasant way. My nerves couldn’t process more than that.”
Or, I DON’T KNOW, THISSSSS….
“Honestly, almost being murdered was not the most interesting thing that had happened to me tonight, and I hadn’t really thought much about it.”
Anywho! Beau gets that fated call from Joss when for those who don’t know from Twilight Beau/Bella thinks that their mother is in danger because of Joss/James and agrees to sneak away from the Cullens into Joss’s clutches. When Beau first hears Joss, he describes her voice as “a soft alto voice, a very pleasant, generic voice — the kind of voice that you heard in the background of luxury car commercials.” How oddly specific? That description literally recalls nothing for me. Can ya’ll hear what that voice is supposed to sound like? Okay, I’m checking to see what it says for James in Twilight. Huh. It’s the same. Except he has a tenor voice. Weird. I guess I just forgot all about his generic luxury car commercial background voice. Or repressed it. Or something.
Also, why cannot vampires hear people on the other side of call? I don’t even have super-hearing powers, and I can often do that. Plus, spoilers, haha, Joss is using a recording of Beau’s mom sounding frantic so are you telling me that someone sounding extra loud and upset cannot be heard by the super-duper hearing undead creatures? Like seriously? Okay? Okay.
Now, I always thought that James was pretty clever and funny. Joss has the same lines so that was nice. Now back to the rest of this crap fest. Beau thinks: “My decision was made.” Then why in the ever loving fuck can Archie not see it? The common excuse for this series is “Oh, they haven’t made up their mind” but oh, look, there’s a mind that looks pretty freakin’ made. Decision. Made. Seems pretty straightforward. (Plus, wouldn’t you have to make a decision not to make a decision to confuse the psychic? I don’t know anymore. Thank God this is almost over.)
Of course, Beau seems more worried about Jessamine’s power and is worried when she will come back. Beau reenters the room with a blank look on his face. Archie has a vision and starts freaking out. Jessamine returns. Archie’s face is blank but also empty? Jessamine’s face is blank. Basically, everyone’s face is blank because Meyer has given up describing people’s faces.

The chapter ends with Archie saying he saw Beau in his vision. Nuh duh. I wonder…did he have a blank face in it? Did he have blank faced children in it? I suppose we will find out next time. 

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined Chapters 18 and 19

Last time on Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined…
We discovered that:
-Archie gives one-armed bro hugs
-Vampires play baseball
-Beau feels like a Neanderthal
This time…
CHAPTER 18
The vampire vistors arrive. The woman in front is the beautiful. The man was wild-looking. Sadly, the second woman had a “forgettable face”. Even for a vampire? Remember in this universe all vampires supposed to be unbelievably beautiful. Ahhh…poor thing.
The vampires figure out that Beau is human. Edythe steps in front of him and growls at the other vampires. Then, our stupid Beau thinks “I wanted to pull her back — this Joss vampire wasn’t messing around — but I could guess exactly how well that would go over. She’d told me to stay still, so I would…unless someone tried to hurt her.
For fuck’s sake, Beau, they are vampires. She’s a vampire. He’s a vampire. What do you think you are going to do that she cannot do a hundred times better? You saw her throw a freakin’ boulder, and you still think that you should step in the middle of a vampire throw-down? **shakes head** Edythe? Edythe, darling. Just go ahead and eat him. You have my permission. The story can just end with: Then I came to my senses and ate him. He was a bit stringy. THE END.
Alas, it does not end like that. Yet. Fingers crossed this happens later.
Anywho, Edythe, Beau, Eleanor, and Archie drive away in the Jeep and come up with a plan where Beau tells his father Charlie that his going back to Phoenix to trick the tracker vampire and keep his father safe.
CHAPTER 19
Beau races into his house acting all angry. He marches into his room and “Then I shoved my hand between the mattress and box spring, searching till I found the knotted tub sock with my cash hoard.” HA! Excuse me, when I think of teenage boys and tube socks, my first thought isn’t a “cash hoard”.
Also, how does this boy have a cash hoard? A hoard of cash? Last time I checked there has been no mention of him having a job, and even if he did he would be making minimum wage. As a poor college student, I completely object to a teenage boy having a cash hoard when I do not!
Also, Beau’s yelling to his dad about how he broke up with Edythe because he liked her too much, and, boy, do I love poor, oblivious Charlie who asks, “Are you doing drugs, Beau?” Drugs? That was the only thing you could thing of, Mr. Cop? Drugs? Well, now that I think about it if my teenage son raced to his room and started whipping out tube socks I guess I would be a smidge confused too.
Red blotches + being a loner + tube socks = drugs
Edythe and Beau are discussing what they plan to do with the other vampires. Beau asks if Joss and Victor (James and Victoria) will be trying to kill Edythe which is pretty much the most DUH question I’ve heard yet. But after he asks this question we get another raw voice simile which compares it to….drum roll please… “like I’d sandblasted the back of my throat.” Wait. What? He “sandblasted” his own throat. Not his throat got “sandblasted”, but he did the “sandblast”-ing?
Okay so I looked it up and “sandblasted” is actually a real word. It means:
SANDBLAST
1. A stream of sand projected by compressed air (as for engraving, cutting, or cleaning glass or stone)
2. To clean, polish, or decorate the surface of (something) by spraying sand on it with a powerful machine
These descriptions are just a doosey. I now imagine Beau trying to wrap his mouth around a machine so he can sandblast himself. What a duffus, amiright?
So Beau swaps clothes with Earnest to confuse the tracker by scent. The group divides up into teams. Edythe and Beau kiss in which “For the shortest second, her lips were icy and hard against mine. Then it was over.” The shortest second, you know, that one second that is shorter than every other second. The runt of the second litters. This book, man. Also, is it just me or this doesn’t sound romantic in the slightest? Last time I checked I don’t want my kisses to be icy or hard. Then Edythe leaves.
Plus knowing our Beau he had to add an extra something that wasn’t in Twilight: “It felt like someone had ripped all the skin off my face. My eyes burned.” Jesus! Are we sure this isn’t a horror story? Are we sure that this isn’t a PSA announcement to the parents out there that red blotches + being a loner + tube socks actually equals vampires and not drugs? Also, can I admire the dedication Meyer has put into this male character. He’s not crying, ya’ll; his eyes are burning. No big deal. No crying by a man here. Just some normal eye burning.
The chapter ends with Beau leaving Edythe’s house in Archie’s arms.


Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined Chapter 15, 16, and 17

Last time on Kelly Reads Twilight Reimagined…
We discovered that:
-The smiling pig has a reason to smile
-Beau is a baby seal
-Beau somehow has ten admirers
This time…
CHAPTER 15
Beau wakes up the next day and takes a shower. Edythe is still there because Charlie has already left for the day. Beau realizes that he forgot to bring his clothes to the bathroom so he “tucked the towel securely around my waist and then marched into the hall with my face blazing red. Even better — the patch of red on my chest was exposed, too.” How is his chest blushing? Seriously, his red patches can only be explained now with a skin condition. Maybe in the sequel he’ll go to a dermatologist.
Edythe wants Beau to meet her family today. Beau is worried not because it’s a family of vampires but because he’s not sure if they will like him. Edythe and Beau make out and Beau faints for a second. Why? He “kind of forgot to breathe”. As you do?
Edythe drives them to her house. Beau sees Earnest for the first time and thinks “There was something really…kind about his face, but I couldn’t put my finger on what it was that made me think that.” Some of you might find this nitpicking, but descriptions like this just make a book seem unfinished. It seems like a placeholder I would put in a story for when I couldn’t think of how to describe something.
Archie comes down the stairs and gives Beau “one of those one-armed bro-hugs”. Is that what they are called? Because I think I might just call them that now. Come on, bro-man-bro, give me a bro-hug for the road.
Edythe plays a piece on the piano that she made just for Beau. Her family disappears to give them privacy. Edythe tells Beau that Archie saw other vampires coming into town. Edythe tells Beau Carine’s (Carlisle’s) backstory which is different from Twilight. In Twilight, Carlisle reluctantly takes up his pastor father’s position to find vampires and through his own cleverness finds a coven of them. Unfortunately, in the process, one weak, hungry vampire feeds on him instead of escaping and Carlisle is turned into a vampire while in hiding.
In Twilight Reimagined, Carlisle is now a woman named Carine who only argues against her father’s position on vampires in vain. Her father destroys the sewer area where the vampires had been living and as revenge one vampire follows him home, turns his daughter Carine into a vampire (because she was the thing he loved the most), and kills him.
On one hand, I understand why the story must be different. As a woman in that time, Carine most likely would not be allowed to take up her father’s position and so on. However, Carlisle’s cleverness and agency (for finding the vampires his father could not) is not replaced with anything in Carine. She becomes a passive character in her own story. The revenge plays out as if she were an object too. Furthermore, this changed backstory does not add up with what Carine does later: make other vampires. Carlisle’s story left room for forgiveness. The vampire that attacked him was weak and hungry and attacked by humans. If anythings, his actions could fall under self defense.
But in Carine’s story the vampire comes to their house for revenge. He forces her father to watch him turn Carine and then Carine is forced to watch her father die. How could she forgive such malicious actions? How could she later on ever thing it was right to change someone into a monster like that? I think this change adds new issues to the story, to be honest.
The chapter ends with Edythe taking Beau to Carine to finish the story.
CHAPTER 16
Apparently, not then. Carine says she would stay and tell the story but she has to go to work. Edythe shows Beau some paintings and continues the story with Beau interrupting with questions. Like Carlisle, Carine discovers she can live off of animals and begins to study and travel. However, during that time it would be unusual for a woman to be traveling alone, but this isn’t mentioned.
Edythe then talks about how Carine spent some time with the Volturi but left after a few decades. She said Carine was lonely and so when she saw Edythe dying alone during the Spanish influenza she turned her. Edythe shows off her room. Archie says there will be a storm and that they should play baseball. You know because that's how vampires spend their immortal lives. 
Which now that I think about it doesn’t really make sense. Yes, I get that they hit so loud that they need thunder to cover it up, but wouldn’t they be constantly replacing bats? Wouldn’t the balls fall to bits and leave nothing to catch? Just saying.
The chapter ends with them agreeing to play baseball.
CHAPTER 17
Edythe drives Beau home and they see that Bonnie and Jules Black are in the driveway. Edythe leaves and Beau convinces Bonnie not to tell Charlie the truth about the Cullens. I wonder how different the book would have been if Bonnie had told. It’s moments like this where I feel the author goes too easy on the main character. The point of a story is to keep pushing the main character, but I feel like Bella/Beau slips away from almost everything.
Beau tells Charlie that Edythe is his girlfriend and feels “a strange sense of pride, being able to claim her this way. Kind of Neanderthal of me, but there it was.” The idea of claiming people in relationships has always been off to me. I guess Meyer kind of scoots past this with the Neanderthal comment but just barely.
Edythe comes over and Charlie gets to meet her. Beau and Edythe drive off. Beau has to hop on her back again so she can run them into the clearing. Everyone but Earnest and Beau start playing baseball. In Earnest’s story, he jumps off a cliff because his two year old daughter died (instead of a days old boy). It seems odd that his wife isn’t mentioned at all though…
They continue to play ball. I still find it weird that when the Cullens collide it apparently sounds like “the crash of two massive falling boulders”. I mean, jeez…Then Archie realizes that the vampire vistors are heading their way. They are worried for Beau’s safety, but continue playing hoping to show that everything is normal and that is how the chapter ends. 
Here's hoping that the vampire vistors kill Beau.