The Hunger Games (Hunger Games Series #1) by Suzanne Collins

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2008
  • 374pp
  • Sales Rank: 167

Reader Rating: (1437 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Story" See All

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  • Overview
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: October 2008
  • Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
  • Format: Hardcover, 374pp
  • Sales Rank: 167
  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Lexile: 810L 

The Barnes & Noble Review

Sixteen-year-old Katniss is smart, athletic, and fast. She can take down a rabbit with a bow and arrow, hitting it straight through the eye. Will these skills be enough to survive the Hunger Games?

Suzanne Collins, the author of the middle-grade fantasy series The Underland Chronicles begins anew, exploring a future landscape that will be familiar to devotees of science fiction's dystopic strain. In a nation called Panem, which occupies the landmass that is the present United States, a parasitical fascist Capitol dominates 12 conquered districts. There was a thirteenth district but it was obliterated during a rebellion. The totalitarian government keeps the subjected populations in line by threatened devastation, starvation, and brutality.

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Synopsis

In the ruins of a place once known as North America lies the nation of Panem, a shining Capitol surrounded by twelve outlying districts. The Capitol is harsh and cruel and keeps the districts in line by forcing them all to send one boy and one girl between the ages of twelve and eighteen to participate in the annual Hunger Games, a fight to the death on live TV. Sixteen-year-old Katniss Everdeen, who lives alone with her mother and younger sister, regards it as a death sentence when she is forced to represent her district in the Games. But Katniss has been close to dead before-and survival.

The New York Times - John Green

brilliantly plotted and perfectly paced…a futuristic novel every bit as good and as allegorically rich as Scott Westerfeld's Uglies books…the considerable strength of the novel comes in Collins's convincingly detailed world-building and her memorably complex and fascinating heroine. In fact, by not calling attention to itself, the text disappears in the way a good font does: nothing stands between Katniss and the reader, between Panem and America. This makes for an exhilarating narrative and a future we can fear and believe in, but it also allows us to see the similarities between Katniss's world and ours.

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Customer Reviews

Surviving an Insane Worldby Shanameydala

Reader Rating:
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February 08, 2010: I thought bipartisan conflict was insane, but Suzanne Collins does a wonderful job of sharing a life much worse. Collins wrote a fascinating book about survival and friendship that was perfect from a teenager's perspective. I highly recommend!

I WAS HOOKED ON THE FIRST PAGEby Anonymous

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February 08, 2010: When I began to read this book I was amazed and interested immediately in the story. I love the characters and my dad had to yell at me to put it down. This is a great book and teenagers and adults will fall in love with it no matter if you are a fiction fan or not.

I Also Recommend: Catching Fire (Hunger Games Series #2).


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common sense media

This item Rated Appropriate for Ages 12 and Up

Why We Rated This Appropriate for Ages 12 and UP

What to watch out for

  • Drugs:

    Adults drink and one is a falling-down drunk.

    Close

  • Violence:

    For a story about 24 teens forced to kill each other, the gore level is fairly low -- but there is some. Teens are speared, shot with arrows, stabbed, mauled by wild animals, burned, and have their heads smashed and their necks broken. Inju... More

    For a story about 24 teens forced to kill each other, the gore level is fairly low -- but there is some. Teens are speared, shot with arrows, stabbed, mauled by wild animals, burned, and have their heads smashed and their necks broken. Injuries are realistic, including burn blistering, blood poisoning, and gangrene. A girl's tongue is cut out. Close

  • Sex:

    Some kissing.

    Close

What Parents Need to Know

About The Hunger Games (Hunger Games Series #1)

Parents need to know that this is a story about a reality show where 24 teens must kill one another until only one survives. They do so with spears, rocks, arrows, knives, fire, and by hand. It's not unduly gory, but there is lots of violence, all of it teen on teen.

Families Can Talk About

Families can talk about the many issues the author raises. How much of a stretch is it for people to see killing as entertainment? Which reality shows remind you of the one in this book, and how? Do other countries see us the way the districts see Capitol? How different is the lifestyle of Capitol from today's urban centers? What would you be willing to do to survive? What are Katniss' true feelings towards Peeta?