Do you love or hate these iconic couples?

The Mortal Instruments’ still

The best (or worst) teen fiction couples

By Sonam Kaloti, Arts Editor

 

With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, what better way to celebrate besides reading teen fiction to (if you’re like me) make up for your own tragic love life? It’s rare to find a teen novel that doesn’t have an epic romantic storyline. For this reason, some of the most notable fictional characters have been introduced within these novels. What makes these couples so special, however, is the careful work of the authors who have curated the perfect yet relatable characters we can almost fantasize about being ourselves. Some of these couples are loved, others despised with a passion, but why?

Warning: There are some spoilers ahead!

 

Bella and Edward –  Twilight

Name a more iconic duo… I’ll wait (there are probably a lot but anyways). The love triangle between Bella, Edward, and Jacob made the teen girls of the late-2000s melt to their knees. Who wouldn’t want two attractive, strong, and supernatural (?) boys fighting over them? Though honestly, Bella and Edward as a couple kind of suck (pun intended) because Edward is just so hot and cold (also pun intended). Not only is he an obsessed creep who watches Bella while she sleeps, but the second things get a little serious, he ghosts her and leaves the country. Both are super unstable and unsure of their relationship, yet the passion is what drives this pair to be one of the most popular teen fiction couples of all time.

 

Katniss and Peeta – The Hunger Games

Yet another dry love triangle. Katniss is best friends with Gale, clicks with him, and has a lot in common with him. Yet she meets Peeta under dire circumstances and suddenly they’re meant to be. This couple is popular due to the whole “I’m not going to die without you—let’s die together, instead” spiel (which feels like it just romanticizes double suicide). This couple seems forced to care for each other because they’re put into circumstances where all they have is each other—so that is romantic. However, had they not entered the Hunger Games, then they probably wouldn’t have ended up together.

 

Harry and Ginny / Ron and Hermione – Harry Potter

Some would say Harry, Ron, and Hermione are a love triangle, but I don’t agree. JK Rowling herself admitted in an interview with Wonderland magazine that pairing Ron and Hermione was a form of wish fulfillment. Many people wished for Harry and Hermione to end up together, but I think that would have been predictable and boring. Ron and Hermione’s romance cultivates throughout the series and, despite their little issues, I think their playful relationship is a cute one.

Harry and Ginny are another story. The couple seems a bit awkward to me. Suffice to say, if my best friend’s little sister had a crush on me for years, I probably wouldn’t go on to marry her. There wasn’t much development either. I don’t even think Harry really talks to Ginny until the last few novels in the series. I do like that Harry and Ron become brothers-in-law, but that’s all I really saw in this relationship.

 

Jace and Clary – The Mortal Instruments

My personal favourite couple, Jace and Clary are just as much, if not more, of a mess than the rest of the couples on this list. These two go on huge adventures, and while intertwined in many off-putting situations, they remain extremely independent in their motives and character development. They even get tortured by the (later falsified) melodrama of being told they’re siblings. What I found clean about this couple is that, while there are small crushes and relationships among other characters, none are large enough to label a love triangle. The reader knows they are meant for each other from the moment they meet, so the rest is just a heart-wrenching journey of what it takes for them to finally be together.