Anyone else read these? I am completely in love with them, despite being 40 and not the ya person they are marketed to. My nephew, upon discovering I'd never read them, told me "Aunt Ashley, if you don't read this book, the world will end." He was pretty right.
They are postapocalyptic (sp?) but also relationship and action driven. The story centers on a girl called Katniss Everdeen who ends up having to fight in the "hunger games" that the Capital and the 12 surrounding districts (what was once the US) put on every ...year or four years, I can't remember. She and her partner in the games create a flurry by doing things in a way that no one has ever tried before, and without spoiling the series, they are basically the story of a girl having to grow up too fast, having to save her family and her way of life, and learning how to revolt and be an individual without it ending up killing her.
Fantastic stuff. I just got the final book today and can't wait to read it.
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The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins
My students will not read it. Maybe I have to do a better job of pimpin it. I dunno.
However, ya think word of mouth would have gotten around since so many people enjoy them. But I won't buy the third becuase the first two never go out.
However, ya think word of mouth would have gotten around since so many people enjoy them. But I won't buy the third becuase the first two never go out.
News, views, and reviews on books and graphic novels for young adult.
http://yabookmarks.blogspot.com/
http://yabookmarks.blogspot.com/
- Anna Elliott
- Compulsive Reader
- Posts: 579
- Joined: March 2009
I loved the first two books of the series and definitely am looking forward to reading the third. Just downloaded it onto my Kindle last night, in fact!
Author of the Twilight of Avalon trilogy
new book: Dark Moon of Avalon, coming Sept 14 from Simon &Schuster (Touchstone)
http://www.annaelliottbooks.com
- Anna Elliott
- Compulsive Reader
- Posts: 579
- Joined: March 2009
Ashley, the beginning is very, very good, but very, very dark so far. Very dystopian. Which I know, duh, it is a dystopia that she's writing about. But much darker in tone than the other 2. Although I'm kind of having That Day with my toddler and baby (if you have kids, you know which day that is wonderful as kids are, of course!) so I think I'll probably enjoy it more after bedtime tonight.
Author of the Twilight of Avalon trilogy
new book: Dark Moon of Avalon, coming Sept 14 from Simon &Schuster (Touchstone)
http://www.annaelliottbooks.com
- Matt Phillips
- Reader
- Posts: 100
- Joined: August 2009
I picked up The Hunger Games after a friend recommended it, saying it's definitely not just for YA audiences.
It's been a long time since I've read something this hard to put down and this unsettling. Wow.
It's like Lord of the Flies meets The Running Man meets Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Perhaps, in my view, the most impressive thing Collins does is immerse us in this world so well that the plot and characters overshadow the shock impact of the premise. The reader has to get a big payoff from the plot and characters in order to be enticed to enter and stay in a world this horrible, and Collins delivers.
It's been a long time since I've read something this hard to put down and this unsettling. Wow.
It's like Lord of the Flies meets The Running Man meets Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Perhaps, in my view, the most impressive thing Collins does is immerse us in this world so well that the plot and characters overshadow the shock impact of the premise. The reader has to get a big payoff from the plot and characters in order to be enticed to enter and stay in a world this horrible, and Collins delivers.
- MLE (Emily Cotton)
- Bibliomaniac
- Posts: 3566
- Joined: August 2008
- Interest in HF: started in childhood with the classics, which, IMHO are HF even if they were contemporary when written.
- Favourite HF book: Prince of Foxes, by Samuel Shellabarger
- Preferred HF: Currently prefer 1600 and earlier, but I'll read anything that keeps me turning the page.
- Location: California Bay Area
I've been saying the Hunger games is Lord of the Flies meets Hatchet, with some Gladiatorial games thrown in. And a numbed acceptance of the horrible borrowed from Lois Lowry's the Giver. I was completely gripped, even though I *loathe* dystopian fiction.
I'm putting off reading the others until I have time to mull them over. Rather hard pictures to get out of your head.
I'm putting off reading the others until I have time to mull them over. Rather hard pictures to get out of your head.
- Matt Phillips
- Reader
- Posts: 100
- Joined: August 2009