THE HUNGER GAMES and CATCHING FIRE
Posted: 14 Oct 2009, 02:17
I have just read a review of these two books in a magazine. Both of these books seem very interesting to me. Here is a part of the review,
"THE HUNGER GAMES is set in an unspecified future time when things have gone pretty spectacularly badly for humanity. The world, or the bit of it we can see, is dominated by a ruling caste who live in luxury in a city called the Capitol. The rest of us live like peasants in 12 districts that are strictly cordoned off from the Capitol and one another. Life in the districts sucks; it's mostly hard labour - mining coal and farming and working in factories- in dismal conditions. To make things even dismaler, once a year each district is required to give up two of its children, chosen by lottery, and enter them in the Hunger Games. The kids are dropped into an enormous arena strewn with traps and hazards, with a heap of weapons and supplies in the middle. The last child alive wins a lifetime of luxury and celebrity. The action is filmed and broadcast to the entire world."
The author is Suzanne Collins. I am very interested to hear from anyone who has read these books and hear their opinion. The review says that they are targeted at young-adults. They sound similar to a novella "The long walk" by Stephen King. Anyway if you have read one or both of these books please let me know what you think of them.
"THE HUNGER GAMES is set in an unspecified future time when things have gone pretty spectacularly badly for humanity. The world, or the bit of it we can see, is dominated by a ruling caste who live in luxury in a city called the Capitol. The rest of us live like peasants in 12 districts that are strictly cordoned off from the Capitol and one another. Life in the districts sucks; it's mostly hard labour - mining coal and farming and working in factories- in dismal conditions. To make things even dismaler, once a year each district is required to give up two of its children, chosen by lottery, and enter them in the Hunger Games. The kids are dropped into an enormous arena strewn with traps and hazards, with a heap of weapons and supplies in the middle. The last child alive wins a lifetime of luxury and celebrity. The action is filmed and broadcast to the entire world."
The author is Suzanne Collins. I am very interested to hear from anyone who has read these books and hear their opinion. The review says that they are targeted at young-adults. They sound similar to a novella "The long walk" by Stephen King. Anyway if you have read one or both of these books please let me know what you think of them.
