Yes, all of the Cullen actors are coming back............the only thing that will happen between Jacob and Renesme is that he will be protective of her, as she does not age to her full potential.
Once she realizes that she can induce hallucinations of Edward by exposing herself to extreme risk she becomes an adrenaline junky, going for late night rides with strange back alley bikers and the like. And when that isn't enough, she talks her old friend Jacob (Taylor Lautner) into helping her build a bike of her own. Which is the point where "New Moon" finally starts to get interesting.
Compared with the stuffy, repressed vampires, Jacob is a breath of fresh air. He's earthy and passionate and Lautner has great chemistry with Stewart. So much so that you can forgive the fact the filmmakers have him running around with his shirt off for half the film in one of the least subtle paeans to a core audience ever.
In fact, it's only around Jacob that Bella starts to resemble anything approaching a normal person as they go through the normal teenage rituals of doing homework and going to the movies, turning into a werewolf and being hunted by a psychotic vampire (Rachelle Lefevre). Actually it's in these sequences where "New Moon" works best as a film and a sequel. It combines the fantastic and the real together in a way that makes it all relatable without being ridiculous.
It repeats much of what was popular in the first "Twilight" with Jacob, right down to the introduction of his werewolf family and their efforts to protect her from her vampire problem. It works largely because it does recognize how much it is drawing comparisons to the first film, to the Cullens, showing Bella the options she may not have known she had. There's even some room made for her family and friends, who unfortunately never get as much screen time as they deserve.
But it's all for naught. Because deep down inside Bella is probably the most dependent person ever born. She's never given up on Edward and despite a little guilt has no qualms leading Jacob on in order to make herself feel as close to Edward as she can even when he's not around.
She seems to have decided if she can't have Edward she'll die, she's just working up the nerve. Those sorts of feelings probably are imminently relatable to "New Moon's" target audience, which really is Bella's sole reason for being, but human beings are more than just feelings, which can be fleeting and extremely shallow.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.