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The Twilight books, and their subsequent movie adaptations, aren’t usually thought of in this vein. But despite the air of romance, Stephenie Meyer’s four-book series, in which a human girl (Bella) falls in love with a pale yet hot vampire boy (Edward) is really about superheroes. And like the hyphenated superheroes of recent movies, Meyer’s vampires are genetically different: they have a superabundance of chromosomes. (The vampires have twenty-five pairs, unlike our twenty-three.)
In our fang-free human life, having extra chromosomes is not usually seen as a plus. Aneuploidies, including Down syndrome, have been targets of prenatal testing as long as such testing has existed. As such, those conditions attract a host of polarizing questions, not least about abortion. In Breaking Dawn—the last book in the Twilight series—these questions come to the fore. Bella...