Everybody's Doing It . . .


Students and adults alike were recommending Suzanne Collins's novel The Hunger Games, and I figured: if everybody's doing it, then it's got to be cool, right? and I didn't want to feel left out-- that's not good for my self-esteem-- I never got over the year I wasn't allowed to play in The Reindeer Games, that really hurt, and what if everyone was going to play The Hunger Game and I didn't know how? so I bullied a student into giving me her copy and I whipped through it in two days, and certainly enjoyed it, the cliffhangers kept me reading at a furious pace, but the experience was more like playing a video game than reading a novel . . . all the knowledge about the dystopian world of Panem is conveyed through high-octane action, and there is some cheesiness, especially at the end, but the book was intended for young adults, so I really can't be critical . . . I'll give it eight cornucopias out ten (but I should subtract another cornucopia because the idea is a bit of a rip-off of Battle Royale, a Japanese novel made into a fantastic and disturbing film by renowned filmmaker Kinji Fukasaku).

5 comments:

  1. no one has ever questioned that.

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  2. I'm reading "Filth" by Irvine Welsh, and just as watching "Deadwood" made me say "cocksucker" a lot, I now have to constantly check myself from saying "cunt" in normal conversation. I think it means something different in Scottish.

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  3. royale with cheese?

    dave - another rec for top 100 books...maybe 101st - The China Study. and if it was on the list, i apologize.

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  4. no-- never heard of it-- thanks. i will check it out. i love irvine welsh, but the c- word is definitely the scottish equivalent of "darn" or "shucks."

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