
The Hunger Gamesby Suzanne Collins
Published August 24, 2010
In my Teenreads.com review of THE
SILENCED by James DeVita, I noted that we have a love of dystopian
novels. I think it's because we, as humans, like to be right. We like to
be able to make correlations between the conditions we see in the world
and possible scenarios about how those conditions could achieve Worse
Case Scenario status. It's frightening, really, that we should want to
be right about that. Maybe it could be that we're glad other people
(authors) seem to share our concerns about our direction --- as a
civilization, as a country.
I admit: I'm a sucker for a good
dystopian novel. In my mind, a GOOD dystopian novel doesn't settle for
simply presenting a bleak set of circumstances and warning, "This is
what could happen if we don't change our ways." A GOOD dystopian novel
forces us to become emotionally invested in the people who are affected
by the bleak conditions. A GREAT dystopian novel goes a step further and
makes us want more. THE HUNGER GAMES by Suzanne Collins, author of the Gregor the Overlander series, falls into this category.
The story is set in Panem, part of
what used to be North America until an epic disaster rent civilization
asunder into a chaotic tailspin. Rising from the ashes is the Capitol, a
nightmarish totalitarian state, and 12 Districts kept under the painful
thumb of the central Capitol government. The Capitol rules ferociously
after an attempt at uprising several years earlier that resulted in the
obliteration of a 13th District. To keep the remaining districts in
line, the Capitol devised "The Hunger Games," a brutal competition for
which each district must supply two "players" (known as tributes)
between the ages of 12 and 18. The 24 tributes fight to the last person
standing in a wasteland-like arena where they compete for basic survival
supplies while every moment is mandatory televised viewing for all
citizens.
When her younger sister is randomly
chosen to represent their district, Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take
her place. She is sent to the Capitol with her district's other tribute,
a baker's son named Peeta, where they are forced to participate in a
macabre pageantry (complete with make-up artists and celebrity
interviews) that leads up to the deadly games themselves. Once she
enters the arena, Katniss must face her murderous fellow-tributes (some
have been training for years in the event they were chosen) and decide
if Peeta is an ally or an enemy. However, the decision seems to be a
moot point because, as the rules stand, only one of them can emerge
alive from the arena.
Collins's dystopia is somewhat
old-fashioned --- mass, seemingly uncalculated oppression --- compared
to more recent entries, such as LITTLE BROTHER, which is firmly grounded
in a more clearly attainable reality. But I think the old-fashioned
approach is part of the charm of this book (if, indeed, you can
attribute the word “charm” to something that offers such a grim
outlook). Collins crafts a vivid, frightening world where the citizens
are worked to the point of exhaustion, starved to the point of collapse,
and humiliated beyond the tolerance of any sane person for the
entertainment of the elite. The heart of the book is the characters.
Katniss is brave and caring, Peeta is smart and smitten. Anyone can
scare readers by presenting a future devoid of hope, but it takes a
skilled writer to create characters we dare to hope for. Collins has
accomplished just that.
You'll be hearing a lot about THE
HUNGER GAMES in the weeks and months to come, if you haven’t already.
There's good reason for that. If you're like me, you have an unrelenting
pile of "to be read" books. Take my advice: nudge this one closer to
the top.
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