Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Hunger Games



    The Hunger Games                 
Author: Suzanne Collins 
Reviewed by Giovanni F.

When Katniss Everdeen is chosen for the Hunger Games, she knows exactly what she’s getting into. And it’s not good.
In the post- apocalyptic ruin of North America, lies a dystopian society called Panem. Similarly to the Colosseum, and the myth of Theseus and the Labyrinth, every year a boy and a girl from each of the 12 districts of Panem, are “reaped” in a ceremony, similar to a raffle, except the name drawn out is the one who goes to compete in the bloody games that are the Hunger Games. Katniss and a boy named Peeta are chosen to go. First they have to go to the Capitol, but once there, they realize that while they are poor and always hungry, the Capitol is the height of wealth and gluttony.

The Games begin, and kids start dying for the Capitol’s entertainment.
Separated from Peeta from the beginning, and fleeing from the Career Tributes, people from the wealthier districts, that are trained for the games, Katniss must use all her skills to survive the Games. Only one “tribute” as they are called, can survive and win
                                   
Katniss is quite a character, skeptical and surly on the exterior, and possessing a fierce determination, as well as an urge to take care of her family, which she sustains by hunting, even though it’s illegal.
Her determination, her hunting skills, and her desire to see her family again, are great assets to her, physically and emotionally during the Hunger Games. She will have to overcome her distrust and work with Peeta to survive.

The other protagonist is Peeta, Katniss’s partner in the Games, who is almost the opposite of her. He grew up in a baker’s home, where he always had food, and never had to worry about going hungry. He is possessed of a soft disposition, and is a dreamer, as opposed to Katniss who is a realist. Peeta has to compete in a sport with a long and bloody history, with no skills except being able to frost cakes.

The antagonist is two-fold. The most obvious one would be the Career Tributes, from Districts 1 and 2, in particular the one who appears to lead them, a barbaric boy named Cato, who swears to kill Katniss personally. The thing is, the real enemy as most of the tributes know, is the Capitol. It is them who force tributes from the Districts, they who rule the Districts with an iron fist.
                       
I found the first 50 or so pages hard to get through, as they only detailed life in District 12, and aspects of the Capitol, but I found that as I read more, the book began to draw me in, combining suspense, action, and hints of desperation at some points, which made it a page-turner. Also the author stopped the book at a suspenseful point, to make you want to read the next one.
I would really recommend this book to everyone, because it’s got a bit of everything, and once it got down to the action, it’s hard to put down, because you want to know what will happen to Katniss and Peeta, since Collins make them so easy to identify with and so likable.
Collins really made a masterpiece when she wrote this, and for anyone who is interested the saga, it continues on in Catching Fire, and Mockingjay.

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