Should Angela Be Pregnant?
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Re: Should Angela Be Pregnant?
- DathanReeves
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The point being, pregnancy only works to make characters' live worse and more difficult in fiction, reality is for the suckers in the real world. There was no need to make Angela's life difficult at the end, so she wasn't pregnant in the end. Fioretta and Sofia needed to have challenges and difficult lives, so they were made pregnant to make there time miserable.
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I think I would have been extremely satisfied with a hint of pregnancy at the end of the book. It was probably the only thing I considered unanswered when I finished reading.joycechitwa wrote: ↑27 Jul 2018, 09:00 By all means, if Sophia and Fioretta got pregnant, why should she break the mold? I guess probably a baby didn't feature in Angela and Alex's life at this point because it would have complicated their lives more than just a little. For purposes of this plot, maybe Belle Ami was silent on the baby aspect intentinoally. But at least, it should have ended with a hint of a baby or a baby on the way...
J.K. Rowling - Albus Dumbledore, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban wrote:Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times, if one only remembers to turn on the light.
- Tamorie Hargro
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I like the thought you put into this! I agree that maybe the cycle had come to an end since Angela didn't get pregnant like the previous two versions of her life. If that's true then Belle Ami is completely genius. And I also like your idea that, maybe the pregnancy simply wasn't important enough for the author to mention. That's hilarious considering this thread is all about how a pregnancy should have happened/been made more apparentpixiequeer wrote: ↑05 Aug 2018, 16:03 Well, at one point, Alex did think to himself about how they hadn't been using protection, so he thought maybe she was on birth control, but then maybe not. But then he furthered his thought with how he wasn't bothered by not using protection and may even want a child with Angela.
However, it is not something they ever had discussed. I honestly waited for some indication that she would be pregnant, but maybe she wasn't in order to make the reader think.
I have three thoughts in regards to this:
1. Maybe it was a sign that history wasn't going to repeat itself so Angela and Alex could move on with their lives together once they found the painting.
2. Maybe she was, realistically speaking, and the author just didn't tell us because it was the only part of history that hadn't repeated itself aside from Alex not dying this time.
3. This whole story unravelled over a time span of only a month, which also, realistically speaking, is not long enough to get a positive pregnancy test, and that also isn't even taking into account the fact that they weren't sexually active that entire time either.
J.K. Rowling - Albus Dumbledore, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban wrote:Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times, if one only remembers to turn on the light.
- Tamorie Hargro
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Oh my goodness, I totally agree! I thought the exact same thing, honestly. Angela was so concerned with her and Alex's lives turning out the exact same way as their previous lives and yet she allows herself to have unprotected sex, raising her chances of getting pregnant and literally ending up stranded in a loop! So, I at first figured that this would serve as a huge basis of conflict for the novel, but it never happened. I was shocked at this, but I'm totally open for more situations in the coming book(s).jjmainor wrote: ↑14 Aug 2018, 21:05"I'm not finished yet, and I'm shocked to hear this. The first time they had sex, I "knew" she was getting pregnant, and I thought she was stupid for not making that connection herself when she's been witnessing the past lives and finding they play out to similarly. It is shocking to learn that it isn't happening.
J.K. Rowling - Albus Dumbledore, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban wrote:Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times, if one only remembers to turn on the light.
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Well, realistically speaking, how could she have gotten pregnant in like three weeks and already been symptomatic? It just doesn't make sense unless she's superhumanTamorie21 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2018, 02:04I like the thought you put into this! I agree that maybe the cycle had come to an end since Angela didn't get pregnant like the previous two versions of her life. If that's true then Belle Ami is completely genius. And I also like your idea that, maybe the pregnancy simply wasn't important enough for the author to mention. That's hilarious considering this thread is all about how a pregnancy should have happened/been made more apparentpixiequeer wrote: ↑05 Aug 2018, 16:03 Well, at one point, Alex did think to himself about how they hadn't been using protection, so he thought maybe she was on birth control, but then maybe not. But then he furthered his thought with how he wasn't bothered by not using protection and may even want a child with Angela.
However, it is not something they ever had discussed. I honestly waited for some indication that she would be pregnant, but maybe she wasn't in order to make the reader think.
I have three thoughts in regards to this:
1. Maybe it was a sign that history wasn't going to repeat itself so Angela and Alex could move on with their lives together once they found the painting.
2. Maybe she was, realistically speaking, and the author just didn't tell us because it was the only part of history that hadn't repeated itself aside from Alex not dying this time.
3. This whole story unravelled over a time span of only a month, which also, realistically speaking, is not long enough to get a positive pregnancy test, and that also isn't even taking into account the fact that they weren't sexually active that entire time either.
The cycle almost did repeat itself though, right up until the very end. So I did wait for some mention of her being pregnant up until I realized the timespan in which this story had taken place. So it very well could have been foreshadowing.
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Hi Tamorie21 -Tamorie21 wrote: ↑02 Jul 2018, 22:51 The Girl Who Knew da Vinci started with Sophia being pregnant, and her tale ended with a memory of her child. Fioretta also got pregnant and her tale ended with her giving birth. There were countless sex scenes in the novel, and for Alex and Angela especially, all instances were unprotected (they never truly breached the question of birth control, at the very least). So my question is, is it realistic that Angela never got pregnant? I was thinking that, by the end of the novel, for sure, Angela would be pregnant.
And if it's not a question of protection and is instead approached thematically, should Angela have ended up pregnant like Sophia and Fioretta, or is this simply an indication of her and Alex's lives moving forward from their past lives? Would it have changed the story for better or worse?
Thank you for bringing up the topic of "Should Angela Be Pregnant?" Due to the many sex scenes throughout book, I asked myself the same question. I remembered chuckling at Alex Caine's brief mentioning about the lack of birth control use in one of the later chapters. Although Alex did not mind carrying a child with Angela, I was slightly appalled that he did not broach the the topic of birth control with Angela.
So, to answer your question, I think that Angela's lack of pregnancy is unrealistic unless she has some infertility issues that might be revealed in future books. Thematically, on the other hand, I like your idea that her lack of pregnancy could be an indication that Angela's and Alex's lives are different from their past lives.
...as for changing the story for better or worse.... If Angela was pregnant, I wonder how the constant visions and blackouts will affect the pregnancy. I think that her gift or curse might cause some complications for the fetus.