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HG1-HungerGames(SuzanneCollins) HG2-CatchingFire(SuzanneCollins) HG3-Mockingjay(SuzanneCollins)

Little did I know when I bought Hunger Games because it was in a supermarket offer and I was just wanting to buy books but couldn't see anything I fancied except the book I originally chose, that I'd also buy the next two books in the trilogy, because I'd actually quite like it. It doesn't seem fair to be surprised, but I must admit I thought it'd be more in the Twilight realm of soppiness, with a heroine who was a bit too good to be true (and yet heartbreakingly flawed in some little way, for the sake of it), and it really wasn't like that at all.

The books tell the story of Katniss Everdeen who ends up "playing" in the Hunger Games, one of the post-apocalyptic way of keeping the people of Panem (the USA, really - or what's left of it) in the Capitol's strict control. The apocalypse was a long time ago, and we don't hear much about it - there's a completely new world now, where the 12 Districts provide for the Capitol, most of them starving and beaten so that the people in the Capitol can wear the wildest sparkling fashions imaginable, and take pills that make them vomit, so that they can keep eating the delicious food that is abundant. Every year two children between the ages of 12 and 18 are selected from each district when their names are effectively pulled from a hat - the reaping. They become pampered and prettified tributes on their way to the Arena, where they will be expected to fight until the death of every child but one of them. Okay, below this - watch out for spoilers if you think you might read/watch it.

Katniss, as befits a hero, outsmarts this, and there are two victors from her district. Or does she...? As the books go on it becomes clear that actually she's little more than a pawn who was mostly manipulated into everything that she did in the games, and this continues afterwards. She does have some guts and gumption about her - she was the one who kept their family together when her father was killed in a mine accident, she volunteered to take the place of her little sister, she looked after Rue and Peeta and Gale. She's not a bad person, I was in her head and heart deeply enough to know what was going on when she made her decisions and so on, and who doesn't love a girl who's good with a bow? But...

But after a while it became clear that not only was Katniss pretty much just reacting to everything that happened to her, but that sometimes she was not reacting and was then forced into the next part of the adventure. Sometimes she makes choices that are not the heroic choices - and then usually in that case the decision is taken out of her hands as the world happens around her again, and she doesn't come off as actually unsympathetic. I kept waiting for her to do the one thing that would make her real - or at least a real hero, because actually I think more people are indeed like her than aren't - but she never did. Well, maybe until the very end of the trilogy, when she finally, finally steps up - but even then her life just keeps droning on, and there's much angst about it, and again it's probably what would really happen to someone, but... it's a book! I wanted just that little bit more! More action on Katniss' part, and slightly less reaction. At least more decisiveness over what she felt was right and what was wrong, or some direction... Something that made me think a little bit more than the obvious.

She was supposed to be the hero of the revolution, the face of the mockingjay rebellion - but ultimately she let herself be just what they told her to be. We rarely if ever saw her actually thinking for herself, she was just what she looked like - the girl on camera. Because - oh yes - this entire thing, first the hunger games themselves, then the quell, then even the rebellion, are being filmed. Katniss is made up and dressed up and beautified - in fact her prep team are some of the main characters in the story. And although she objects to this on one level, she ends up coming over as just oh-so-modest, because in fact she goes along with it every step of the way.

She volunteered to take part in the hunger games in place of her sister, when the story opens - that's how much, we discover, she loves her. But we very rarely - if ever - see the two of them interacting, so we never quite feel it, it's idealised. Gale is her best friend and soulmate - until Katniss is thrown into the games with another boy instead, who she ends up pretending to be in love with so that they can both survive. Peeta really is a good person, a hero - until he's broken at the end, and seems to become a villain. And then Gale is effectively turned into something of a villain too, and the various other friends and acquaintances that Katniss has made fall - usually in some grisly but often at least mildly heroic way, and occasionally due to villainy - by the wayside.

At the end we're left with Katniss, who finally managed one heroic act, and a few other surviving characters, all still managing to keep going, until there is a feeling of hope at the very end that life itself goes on and does get better. But in the meantime there's much seriously hard going, torture and pain and punishment. Much betrayal. (It really is like real life...) I like that none of it was prettied up, that people who were in danger didn't always make it through, and that the ones who did, didn't come through unscathed. The alcoholic did not miraculously reform, the heroes are covered in scars and nightmares, but spring always comes. I'm just... left wanting a little bit more. I wanted Katniss to make slightly better decisions for slightly better reasons, because I ended up thinking that her final act of heroism was almost accidental. She did have to work it out, and she did have to have the guts to do it, but she had to be broken and broken and broken in order to get that far, and I didn't find that particularly inspiring or even thought-provoking.

I've got the first dvd on my shelf, and I rather think that'll go in my player tonight - it'll be interesting to see how Katniss comes over there, because it can't possibly be the way she comes over in the books... well, to me, anyway... *g* At one point, in fact, I started thinking that I could see exactly how the books would have been chosen for a film - they're great Hollywood material. They try to be more than that, I think, I'm just not convinced at all that they made it. Anything that gets kids (and any of us!) reading is usually a good thing - but there's a case to be made that we need to be careful what we call a hero.

Oh, and the Bechdel test! I was sure, from hearing Katniss being trumped as finally a girl with guts and a movie character that girls could aspire to!, that it would pass - but I'm not entirely sure the books do, or at least not by much... Are there conversations between two female characters? Well... between Katniss and Rue, briefly. Between Katniss and Joannah, again briefly. Anyone else...? The story is mostly about Katniss in relation to the two boys in her life, her father as her favourite parent, in relation to her mentor, in relation to her dresser (male), erm... Okay, teenage girls are very aware of boys, but there's usually some thoughts about other girls in there too - not the same kind of thoughts necessarily, but girls do also notice girls. Kat does a bit, but her relationships with Rue and Prim and her mother and Joannah and Coin and all seem much less solid than the relationships she has with boys and men in the book. It's not at all a male-dominated book series, far from it, and the f-f conversations are not about men, but it barely scrapes the Bechdel test...

And finally - I'd originally thought I'd include these books in my Once Upon A Time challenge, but they're definitely more science fiction than fantasy, so I don't think they do fit really. Rats. Worth reading though, cos they're good and popcorn-y and more-ish, and they're apparently what the kids are talking about these days (were, probably, I'm late to everything... *g*). I just need to figure out exactly why the kids love them so much... so I shall watch the movie. *g*

If anyone else has read the books I'd love to know what you thought of them... what'd I miss? *g*

Date: Wednesday, 30 April 2014 10:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gilda-elise.livejournal.com
I haven't read the book, but I've seen the first movie. It was enjoyable, but nothing special. Certainly not the next Lawrence of Arabia. But from everything I'd heard, and your review pretty much bears it out, the books are not well thought out and rather light.

Date: Wednesday, 30 April 2014 09:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] byslantedlight.livejournal.com
I watched the film last night, and didn't find it as good as I'd hoped. Its been so long since I've had books/movie in front of me, that I forgot the correct order was film-first then books, because then you can enjoy the film on its own merits, and have the second joy of all the additional information in the books... Maybe not very well thought out is right - they're so almost a great series. But maybe if they had been a bit more thought out they wouldn't have had so much popular appeal - heaven forbid people actually should have to think... *sighs*

Hold Your Breath, Sunshine


A ship is safe in the harbour - but that's not what ships are for.

~o~

I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night. (Sarah Williams)

~o~

Could've.
Should've.
Would've.
Didn't. Didn't. Didn't.

~o~

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