By Suzzanne Collins
- Pub Date: 2025
- Genre: Young Adult, Dystopian Fantasy
- Where I bought this book: Roebling Books & Coffee, Newport, Ky.
- Why I bought this book: Her books are a masterwork of characters and storytelling
- Bookmark used: The Corner Bookstore, New York City
Perhaps it's not a coincidence that 47 children die in a tale that simmers the spark of a revolt that eventually ignited a revolution against a cruel and vindictive totalitarian regime.
Collins outdoes herself in this timely tale that serves as another prequel to her Hunger Games trilogy, following up a previous prequel to weave detail and storyline into outstanding characters both new and updated. It cannot be easy to write a novel that everybody knows the ending to, but Collins, a master of the art, achieves her aim.
She gives additional background and insight into characters such as Haymitch Abernathy, Lucy Gray Baird, Katniss Everdeen's ancestors, President Coriolanus Snow, Effie Trinket, Plutarch Heavensbee, Beetee, Mags, and Wiress, among others.
It takes place during the second Quarter Quell, the one we already know produced District 12's only living victor. Indeed, Haymitch, 16 during the 50th Hunger Games, is the protagonist and narrator of the tale, and we hear and feel his every thought, fear, and emotion.
Haymitch's token from Lenore |
Eagerly I wished the morrow;--vainly I had sought to borrow
Collins ties it together with liberal use of Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven, a poem about longing, grief, and loss. Haymitch feels those acutely both inside the arena and afterwards, and the poem gives his young girlfriend her name.
This may be the best book in the series. It helps us understand what happens in Panem. it shows how ignoring or erasing parts of your history can be devastating. It reaches out to us to understand her characters, their motives, and most of all, their suffering.
It's truly a tale of -- and for -- the ages.
No comments:
Post a Comment