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Any review at this point is virtually superfluous. The books really are good reading; the violence, concept, and other science fiction are very current. There's a focus that feels very real-world oriented (global warming replaced by hunger, famine, and then localized gluttony. Much like obesity in America today.)
The novel is dystopian, so there's a futuristic slant, but like good science fiction, the idea of the "Hunger Games" is a combination of Survior meets The Olympic Games meets Big Brother. It feels entirely current though the plot is as old as the Roman Colosseum.
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Parents should be warned, all of the hallmarks of war are in this book: death, dying, and kill or be killed, and the stakes are incredibly high, and the government conspiracy and collusion will hit its zenith in the last book in the trilogy... coming to a book store near you next fall.
From the New York Times Bestselling List this week:
This Week | Weeks on List | |
---|---|---|
1 | CATCHING FIRE, by Suzanne Collins. (Scholastic, $17.99.) The protagonist of "The Hunger Games" returns. (Ages 12 and up) | 3 |
2 | THE HUNGER GAMES, by Suzanne Collins. (Scholastic, $17.99.) In a dystopian future, a girl fights for survival on live TV. (Ages 12 and up) | 54 |
1 comment:
I love the Hunger Games and Catching Fire, I can not wait for book 3 and the movie. :D
Themockingjay.vndv.com
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