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Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World": A Satiric Vision of a Utopia

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Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World": A Satiric Vision of a Utopia
Breaking Dawn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[pic]
"Twilight 4" redirects here. For the film adaptations of this novel, see The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn.

For the 2004 mystery-thriller film with Kelly Overton and James Haven, see Breaking Dawn (2004 film).

|Breaking Dawn |
|[pic] |
|Author(s) |Stephenie Meyer |
|Cover artist |Gail Doobinin (design) |
| |Roger Hagadone (photo) |
|Country |United States |
|Language |English |
|Series |Twilight series |
|Genre(s) |Paranormal romance, young-adult fiction |
|Publisher |Little, Brown and Company |
|Publication date |August 2, 2008 (USA) |
| |August 4, 2008 (UK, AUS) |
|Media type |Print (hardcover, paperback) |
|Pages |756 (hardcover) |
|ISBN |ISBN 0-316-06792-X |
|Preceded by |Eclipse |

Breaking Dawn is the fourth and final novel in the The Twilight Saga by American author Stephenie Meyer. Divided into three parts, the first and third sections are written from Bella Swan 's perspective and the second is written from the perspective of Jacob Black. The novel directly follows the events of the previous novel, Eclipse, as Bella and Edward Cullen get married, leaving behind a heartbroken Jacob.



References: Marketing Entertainment Weekly magazine released an excerpt of Breaking Dawn on May 30, 2008.[14] Stephenie Meyer also revealed a 'Quote of the Day ' from Breaking Dawn for about three weeks prior to its August 2, 2008 release 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.[26] Reception

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