{"id":2621,"date":"2011-03-25T09:00:12","date_gmt":"2011-03-25T09:00:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2621"},"modified":"2011-03-25T09:00:12","modified_gmt":"2011-03-25T09:00:12","slug":"the-girl-who-was-on-fire-reviewing-the-hunger-games","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/03\/25\/the-girl-who-was-on-fire-reviewing-the-hunger-games\/","title":{"rendered":"The Girl who was on Fire: Reviewing the Hunger Games trilogy"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve been reading a lot of Young Adult fiction lately. There’s
some serious talent in that market that can’t be summed up by glibly
taping a Vampire Books: the Section Formerly Known as Young Adult<\/em><\/a> sign to
the shelves. Nice one Anonymous, but you’ve obviously never read
The Hunger Games<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
“Happy Hunger Games! And may the
odds be
ever<\/em> in your favour!”<\/p>\n – Effie Trinket,
The Hunger Games<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
Occasionally billed as the ‘anti-Twilight’,
The Hunger Games<\/strong> trilogy by
Suzanne Collins<\/strong> tells the story of Katniss
Everdeen, ‘the girl from District 12,’ who has to
fight for her life when she takes her sister’s place in
the Games.<\/p>\n
The Districts work to provide food and goods for the ruling
class in the Capitol; they’re poor, underfunded places
where poverty and starvation are rife. Kids can take
tesserae<\/em>, meaning their names are in the lottery
more than once, to get extra grain for their family for
the year. Katniss Everdeen supports her mother and younger
sister with
tesserae<\/em>, and through hunting illegally on
Capitol lands, but when her sister’s name comes up
on Reaping Day, the whole world watches Katniss step up
on stage to take her place.<\/p>\n
Journeying to the arena, Katniss is taken to the
Capitol, where rich sponsors compete to back her and
she gets to know Peeta Mellark, the boy from District
12. But when the Games begin, will she be able to
shoot arrows not at rabbits and deer, but at other
tributes?<\/p>\n
Alliances will be made and broken in the arena, but
there can only be one winner.<\/p>\n
You can
read
the first two chapters for free on the official
website<\/a><\/strong>, and I really recommend you
do. If you like it, buy it, read it, and share it
with the teenagers in your family, if you’ve
got them. The first novel,
The Hunger Games<\/strong>, is followed by
Catching Fire<\/strong>, and the trilogy
concluded late last year with
Mockingjay<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
“If I can shoot rabbits, I can shoot
fascists… If you tolerate this, then
your children will be next.”<\/p>\n
– The Manic Street
Preachers<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Why would I recommend
The Hunger Games<\/strong> to BadRep
readers? Well, they’re
great<\/em> books, and I like you
guys. Oh, you mean to a feminist
website specifically? Well, in a genre
that often seems to think it needs to
write
about <\/em>boys to get boys
and <\/em>girls to read it, this
series features a brilliant,
central female character, and
other great, varied female
characters besides, including
soldiers and powerful
politicians.<\/p>\n
While she’s protective of
her family, she’s
uncaring, paranoid and mean when
dealing with people who fall
outside her circle. She’s
not a dyed-in-the-wool Joan of
Arc figure; the first chapters
show her arguing against her
hunting partner’s
politically rebellious comments.
She’s clueless when it
comes to other people’s
feelings, terrible at realising
her own, selfish, dangerously
impulsive,
completely<\/em> a product of
the dystopian society she
lives in, and
yet…<\/p>\n
… I am trying hard,
very<\/em> hard, not to
say too much about
Katniss, her actions, her
choices throughout the
trilogy, what happens to
her, and the dark places
Collins goes with this
character, just because I
don’t want to make
this review too spoilery.
Suffice to say, she had me
by the heartstrings the
moment she stepped up to
save her sister, and it is
this complex and unique
character who makes the
series for me.<\/p>\n
Collins avoided easy
stereotypes and did not
write a setting where
boys have the advantage
in violent situations
because of “higher
testosterone levels than
girls”, or
“slightly larger
body mass”, or any
of those excuses that
usually get used when
someone is telling you
that they Don’t
Watch Women’s
Football Because [insert
reason here].<\/p>\n
Girls have won the
Hunger Games, and won
often. Winning
isn’t just about
brute strength,
it’s about
courage, smarts, a
certain unsqueamish,
unthinking approach to
violence and your own
survival. It’s
also about the skills
learned in your
District, (some
contenders can fish,
some know which plants
will poison you) the
advantages of your
District (were you
starving
before<\/em> you left
for the Games?), and
social skill: can you
charm the cameras
enough so that rich
sponsors will pity
you, or perhaps bet
money on you, and
therefore send you
gifts of weapons or
medicine during the
Games?<\/p>\n
Skillfully, Collins
has included almost
ironic echoes of
other fiction aimed
at this age-group.
In another life, the
‘Careers’
in the arena (kids
from richer,
better-fed Districts
who train and
actually volunteer
for the games, in a
bid for wealth and
glory) would be the
‘jocks’
of any high-school
drama.<\/p>\n
The beautiful
dresses made for
Katniss for her
pre-game appearances
– every
tribute has an image
consultant, make-up
artists, their own
fashion designer
– would be the
‘prom
dress
scene’<\/a> in
another work, were
not for the fact
that everyone
attending these
parties is quite
looking forward to
watching her fight
for her life in the
Games, her fashion
designer has put more
thought<\/a> into
her outfits than one
might expect, and
that oh, she better
fill up on those
party favours,
because she
won’t be
eating properly for
a
while…<\/p>\n
It’s
refreshing to read
about a heroine
who’s actually
thankful for what
she
has<\/em>, and
who would find the
concept of dieting
absolutely
ridiculous.<\/p>\n
Katniss’s
potential
romances, Peeta
and Gale –
and there are
two of them, as
is
traditional<\/a>
– would be
the Jacob and
Edward, the Stefan
and Damon<\/a>,
that this story
revolved around,
were it not that
the reader, and
Katniss herself,
is far more
invested in
whether
characters live
or die than who
they sleep with!
Though
“I
really
can’t
think
about
kissing
when
I’ve
got a
rebellion
to
incite.”<\/p>\n
–
Katniss
Everdeen<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Er, sorry
Katniss.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Did
I have any
problems
with the
series?
Well, the
final book
kind of
went
against my
own sense
of who
should
live, who
should die
and how,
and to be
honest, it
felt a
little
like it
was rushed
to hit the
release
date in
the shops.
However,
in much
the same
way that a
dedicated
Harry
Potter<\/strong>
fan
wouldn’t
recommend
that you
skip the
series
just
because
they
didn’t
like the
infamous
epilogue<\/a>
and
thought
that JKR
needed a
better
editor
after
book
three
(oh she
really
did), my
problems
with
Mockingjay<\/strong>
don’t
stop
me
wanting
to
recommend
The
Hunger
Games<\/strong>
to
every
book-lover
I
know.<\/p>\n
I’m
feeling
nervous
about
the
upcoming
movie<\/a>.
Considering
the
Hollywood
treatment<\/a>
given
to
the
last
kid’s
franchise
I
loved,
I
hope
Katniss
is
cast
with
dark
hair,
with
olive
skin,
the
way
she’s
described
–
I
hope
Thresh
and
Rue<\/a>
aren’t
white.
On
a
more
speculative
note,
I’d
jump
up
and
down
in
the
cinema
if
we
see
Cinna
flirting
with
men.
I
really
hope
the
real
message
of
the
books
comes
across:
that
political
complacency
is
the
real
enemy,
that
if
we’re
duped
by
‘bread
and
circuses’
then
we’re
all
culpable
for
what
is
done
in
our
names.<\/p>\n
But
however
the
movie
turns
out,
Hollywood
adaptations
always
mean
more
book
sales,
and
more
kids
reading
a
series
that
teaches
them
to
question
authority,
to
question
the
media,
that
teaches
them
that
rebellious
actions
can
lead
to
change…
well,
that
can
only
be
a
good
thing.<\/p>\n
\n
I’m
Team Joanna
<\/del>I’m
Team Gale, if
you’re
asking.<\/p>\n