Like The Hunger Games - Library Edition?
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48 Reviews
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Holmes said on Jun 18, 2011 | 3 feedbacks
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2 people find this helpful




Fantastic Read
I picked this book up because, at the time, I was a bit (or alot) obsessed with Twilight and Stephanie Meyer. My version of HG had a recommendation from Stephanie Meyer on the front. I have to say WOW - this book is a great read. While it is teen/young adult fiction, I have lent it to a number of ad ... (continue)
JB said on Apr 13, 2010 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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red said on Mar 7, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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*Honey* said on May 23, 2012 | Add your feedback
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Hunger Games is really really making me nervous. This novel showed us such a great and thrilling adventure.
I was too nervous to keep on reading. The development of the story has kept me on the edge of my seat. I am so happy that the girl stayed alive every time I turned the pages.
I think I will ... (continue)
Miss Clauclau said on May 21, 2012 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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amazing
I didn't expect too much of this book, I found it in the teenager's section but as everybody talked about "the hunger games" as one of the most amazing books they have ever read, i decided to give it a try and IT AMAZED ME!!! It is not the kind of literature you can find in books like twilight (bori ... (continue)
Lebasi Rotenqui said on Apr 25, 2012 | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(718)
- English Books
- Others 384 Pages
- ISBN-10: 054531058X
- ISBN-13: 9780545310581
- Publisher: Scholastic Press
- Pub date: Sep 01, 2010
- Also available as: Paperback, Hardcover and eBook
- In other languages: other languages
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- The Hunger Games Sec001 (9 comments, 8 people)
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780545310581 | Others | $22.99 | $22.28 | The Book Depository |
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 7 copies tradable: → | ||||
5 people find this helpful
Book 1 of Hunger Games leaves you hungry for more
I'm so full of praise for this book that I've to criticize it first, before I get lost in my adoration for it, as you'll see soon enough.
My criticism: The concept is not original. It's like a cross between 1984 and Battle Royale (大逃殺), especially of the latter. (But hey, whatever i ... (continue)
I'm so full of praise for this book that I've to criticize it first, before I get lost in my adoration for it, as you'll see soon enough.
My criticism: The concept is not original. It's like a cross between 1984 and Battle Royale (大逃殺), especially of the latter. (But hey, whatever is original? Especially if you like to read thrillers, you'll realize 90% of them are of the same mold)
With criticism out of the way, I'm going to pour forth all my insights after reading the book. Here we go!
The world in The Hunger Games is a dystopian world which is frighteningly similar to our world right now. The parallels are unmistakable: our preoccupation with entertainment, our lack of patience, our demand that something has to happen every minute or else we'll be bored to death. And for that to happen, things must remain controllable, rules must be flexible (to the authority) in order for contingencies to be applied. So the playing field is never even for the players. This is probably Suzanne Collins's satire on the popularity of reality TV.
With seventy-three Hunger Games already held, our heroine Katniss knows only too well that her victory not only depends on her survival skills but also on her understanding of the Gamemakers' mentality. This is what impacts me most: how children are forced to be manipulative and deceitful in order to outsmart the authority. In that scary world, technology has advanced to a new high while humanity has devolved to a new low. The ills of society have become even more intense and twisted, and we are frightened to realize that we're quite familiar with all these ills after all.
But humans are not just intelligent robots. No matter how tightly controlled they are, their rebellious souls are never entirely lost. This is what makes this book so readable: we are watching Katniss (and some others) quietly defying authority using whatever puny resources she has. Aren't we all doing the same thing in real life, one way or another?
The ending is very satisfying, not because it is complete, but because it so logically leads to Book 2, in which the games will be replaced by battles. I can't wait!
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