I do almost all of my Twilight blogging these days over at HogwartsProfessor.com. Here’s a short list of my more recent thoughts posted at that site about the meaning and artistry of Mrs. Meyer’s Fork Saga:

Mrs. Meyer’s Anti-Cult, Feminist Story-Message

PodCast on Eclipse and Bree Tanner

Mrs. Meyer says Twilight is Meaningless?

PodCast with Mrs. Meyer’s Favorite BYU Professor, Steve Walker

‘Alchemists Everywhere!’ A Hog’s Head PubCast

Thank you in advance for joining the discussion at HogwartsProfessor!

In the run-up to the June release of Eclipse, the movie, a reporter from Entertainment Weekly sat down with the actor and actress who play Edward and Bella to ask a few questions. These celebrity interviews aren’t spontaneous affairs with gotcha questions meant to take the celebrities off-guard, but staged exchanges to communicate studio talking points. I was surprised, then, on reading the second question because it was pretty meaty:

EW: Some people read Breaking Dawn as very pro-life and Mormon because Bella decides to have her baby even though it’s endangering her life. Did any of that bother you when you read the book?

STEWART: No, because it made sense. Not wanting to give up the baby is about her holding onto that last thing that she would have to give up if she was not human anymore. Right after she and Edward sleep with each other for the first time, she says, “Oh, f***, I might want to be human for a little bit longer.” The baby is just an even more intense version of that.
PATTINSON:
I think people make up all these Mormon references just so they can publish Twilight articles in respectable publications like the New York Times. Even Stephenie [Meyer, author of the Twilight novels] said it doesn’t mean any of that. It is based on a dream.

After some notable screw-ups, both Ms. Stewart and Mr. Pattinson are clearly reading from Twilight franchise talking point scripts. I find their answers to the Mormon question interesting, then, for at least three reasons: Read the rest of this entry »

Tucson Festival f Books CatepillarThe Very Hungry Caterpillar and I met up in Tucson on Saturday at the Festival of Books on the University of Arizona campus — and meeting celebrities like this wasn’t even the high point of my travels. If you’re interested, read on below the jump. If not, I’m back at home in my Lehigh Valley bunker now and will be re-joining the Hunger Games and Twilight conversation at HogwartsProfessor.com tomorrow. FHSProfessor is pretty much on sabbatical so hie to HogPro for serious discussion of Twilight!

I flew into Phoenix last Thursday and enjoyed a wonderful afternoon at Arizona State University’s Barrett Honors College. Prof. Joel Hunter, faculty adviser to ASU’s Harry Potter Society, talked with me on a tour of campus and took me to dinner with said Society before my talk that night on ‘The Eyes of Deathly Hallows.’ Considering it was the night before Spring Break at America’s largest university, we had quite the crowd — and these folks have a command of canon detail that, frankly, really surprised me (how many readers know how many stair cases there are at Hogwarts off the top of their head?). They also were all over the Coleridgean ideas and anagogical artistry in Deathly Hallows, which was a treat for me to discuss with them.

The next day I taught a class at Glendale Preparatory Academy, one of Arizona’s Great Hearts charter schools, and I confess to being both surprised and delighted by my experience there. Headmaster David Williams has created a challenging, nurturing and wonderfully engaging school of moral and intellectual virtue north of Phoenix in just a few years. My evidence? The experience I had Friday morning at ‘GP’ leading a discussion of George Herbert’s poem, Vertue (1633), in a classroom of seventh graders; the conversation never flagged, the participation of the 20 boys and girls was doggone close to 100% — and everyone’s comments were always attentive and respectful of their classmates’ contributions.

This isn’t an elite private school but a free public school whose students were chosen by lottery from the pool of local children interested in the Great Hearts ‘Great Book’ program. These polite, wonderfully challenging, and curious 12 and 13 year olds had been part of Glendale Prep’s community for a year at the most — and yet they all dove into Herbert’s meditation on life and death and his wonderful conceits with real enthusiasm and no little insight. I’m confident I was much more impressed with them than they were with me. I sat back and directed conversational traffic for the most part — while marveling at their excitement and courtesy.

I drove to Tucson that night after a sushi lunch with the Glendale Prep architects and an afternoon meeting with the ASU Potter Society. Incredibly, to me at least, these die-hards met to discuss chapters 16-18 of Deathly Hallows though the campus was all but empty (and given the Godric’s Hollow and pre-Silver Doe material of those chapters, it was a full 90 minutes!). I arrived in Tucson and, after a wonderful conversation with my hostess for the festival, I was asleep in a minute when I finally turned in.

Saturday was a ‘wow.’ Lisa Bunker, goddess of Harry Potter fandom and to all Potter Pundits because of her AccioQuotes.org resource (and a person to whom I will always be personally and profoundly indebted because of certain sensational discoveries she posted there), gave me the royal tour of beautiful Tucson with none other than ‘Lexicon Steve’ Vander Ark, also in town for the Book Festival! The first eye-popper was at the Tucson Museum of Art where Ms. Bunker introduced us to El Nacimiento, a Nativity scene several decades in the making and something I won’t ever forget (I wish we had had the day or two of attention this one room display and three dimensional icon deserved).

Before heading over to the University for the Festival of Books and my Twilight talk, Steve and I were treated to a trip out of town to the ‘Rez,’ and a Roman Catholic mission church, the Mission San Xavier de Bac, founded there in the 17th Century and still active as a Native American parish run by Franciscans today.Mission San XavierSan Xavier Steve

The weather was clear, bright, and cool. The desert was in bloom and the book lovers were on hand to listen to and meet their favorite authors. I was flattered that so many people came to hear my thoughts on Mrs. Meyer’s Twilight — and that they found my arguments about these books (which they loved or despised, it seemed to me, with little middle ground) largely convincing. Ms. Bunker sent me these Twitter notes from the University of Arizona Arts group, Wild Cat Arts:

The folks in attendance bought copies of Spotlight (and a few picked up Deathly Hallows Lectures, too, hurrah) and we spoke in the Signing Tent for about an hour afterward while I did the Gilderoy number, talked Twilight, and enjoyed the roasted corn. Ms. Bunker then gathered a clan of librarians, Potter mavens, and good friends — several of whom qualified on all three counts — for a night of live mariachi music and delicious Mexican food at a delightful restaurant.

I drove back to Phoenix before dawn on Sunday for an early morning flight and I was fully expecting to sleep my way through fly-over country. As providence would have it, instead I wound up between a pilot on his way to Kuwait and a serious reader and history professor at a notable Washington, DC, university. We talked without a break from Arizona to Washington-Dulles — and to where the baggage claim and flights to Allentown paths split. What a treat to discuss life as a mercenary in the 21st century and the comparative merits of Gladstone and Disraeli as writers and literary wonders at 36,000 feet…

And even nicer to be at home! Just in time to get ready for April’s talks at the C. S. Lewis Conference in Oklahoma City, two venues in Missouri, and then Augustana College… But more on those dates and topics in the next few weeks.

A very warm thank you to Joel Hunter and the Harry Potter Society at ASU, David Williams and Company at Glendale Prep (especially Mrs. Junker’s 7th Grade Literature class!), SVA, Lisa, the Bunk-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named, and Gertrud in Tucson for their delightful hospitality, my friends from the talk at the Festival of Books, and my conversation companions from United Flight 952, Phoenix to Washington. It was a trip I hope to repeat for next year’s Festival, if not sooner!

(Photos all by L.Bunker)

There isn’t that much Twilight in the talk I gave at the Climacus Conference last weekend in Louisville and there are two helpings of Coleridge and St. Maximos the Confessor, so I understand this isn’t for everyone here. Those of you who are interested in why human beings read, though, and who suspect that reading novels and poetry makes us more human may find it interesting. I try to explain how our suspension of disbelief when entering into a good book helps us conform the soul to reality.

Your comments and corrections, of course, are coveted.

Travis Prinzi interviews me at the Hog’s Head! Check it out…

Mid-Manhattan Branch, y’know, the one with the lions (only across the street!).

4 March, 6:30 pm, on the sixth floor, ‘Spotlight on Twilight.’ Be There!

Update: Arrrghhh. It’s not 4 March; it was 4 February! My apologies to those of you who wanted to come but missed this because of my posting the date incorrectly…

Check it out!

Can the Opera and Forks Reality Show be far behind? (H/T to Perelandra)

If you’re joining us after reading Lev Grossman’s piece in today’s TechLand/NerdWorld.com article What Twilight Means and this is your first visit to Forks High School Profesor.com, welcome! FHS Prof is the site for serious readers of Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series and for those folks wanting to discuss the points made in my book, Spotlight: A Close-Up Look at the Artistry and Meaning of the Twilight Novels. (Yes, I hope you will buy a copy….)

Here are a few links to interesting posts and collections of posts in the hope you will join our discussions!

* The New Moon Posts: What is the Second Book Really About?
* Twilight and the Future of the Novel: Thoughts on a WSJ Editorial
* The Spectrum of Christian Opinion on Twilight
*A Twilight-focused editorial in the Washington Post and damning the series with faint praise,
* The Meaning of Mrs. Meyer’s denial of profound meaning in her books in August, 2008, and …
* A series of posts comparing the critical receptions Ms. Rowling’s and Mrs. Meyer’s popular series received.

And don’t neglect the Anne of Green Gables discussion just below this one for more on Coleridge, critical nominalism, and Bella as the ‘Heart’ Incarnate! Thanks again for joining us — and please share the site with friends you know who love literary discussions, whether they love or loathe Mrs. Meyer’s work. See you tomorrow!

Sorry to have been gone for so long but I have been vacationing on Prince Edward Island and Avonlea with Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables. I’m working on a new book now that Spotlight: A Close-Up Look at the Artistry and Meaning of the Twilight Novels is available for purchase on Amazon.com. The new book is tentatively titled Bella Swan’s Bookshelf (creative, I know) about the literary influences playing on the Twilight series and putting this together requires a lot of reading time with Lucy Maud Montgomery’s beloved Anne Shirley-Blythe.

Today I want to start the discussion of the Anne of Green Gables (hereafter Anne) Montgomery (”LMM’) link to Mrs. Meyer’s Forks Saga here with some notes about Mrs. Meyer’s comments about Anne, the obvious parallels in the stories, and the several reasons well outside of plot points that I think Anne Shirley and Bella Swan are a match. Read the rest of this entry »

This is not a Twilight themed post so… those of you who despise anything related to Harry Potter (or Harry Potter fandom), please disregard. All PotterPhiles, however, please continue reading. Read the rest of this entry »

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