Classic review: The Hunger Games
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[This review from the Monitor's archives originally ran on Dec. 27, 2008.] In middle school, we were tormented annually by something called the Presidential Fitness Test. If you failed (as I inevitably did at the 鈥渁rm hang鈥), they gave you a T for 鈥渢ried.鈥
Things are a little different for Katniss Everdeen. If she fails, the 16-year-old dies.
鈥淭he future鈥 equals dystopia in much of science fiction, and Suzanne Collins鈥檚 gripping new novel for teens, The Hunger Games, is no exception.
After society鈥檚 collapse from environmental chaos and a subsequent failed rebellion, what鈥檚 left of humanity is organized into 12 districts. (There were 13, but the last one was obliterated as punishment for rebelling.)
Kept in poverty by a totalitarian government, the populace is forced to labor to keep The Capitol (what used to be Denver) in sumptuous splendor. Katniss and her mother and sister live in District 12, formerly Appalachia, where they would have starved if Katniss didn鈥檛 sneak daily into the forest to go hunting. (Poaching is technically punishable by death, but local officials are more likely to buy her game than arrest her.)
It鈥檚 not the setup that gives 鈥淭he Hunger Games鈥 its crackling energy.
At different times, the novel reminded me of everything from the myth of Theseus and Shirley Jackson鈥檚 鈥淭he Lottery鈥 to Stephen King鈥檚 鈥The Running Man鈥 and the reality-TV show 鈥淪urvivor.鈥
But Collins pours so much detail into her world-building and her characters that the book grabs you even before the games begin.
Those games would make even Nero鈥檚 Rome blanch. Every year, a boy and a girl are chosen via lottery to 鈥渞epresent鈥 their district in The Hunger Games.
The event, required viewing for the rest of the nation, is a blood sport in which the 24 teens are dumped, gladiator-style, into a locked arena and left to fight it out in front of cameras. The last one alive wins freedom and a lifetime of riches.
This year, to Katniss鈥檚 horror, her 12-year-old sister鈥檚 name is called. Katniss immediately volunteers to take her place.
While she believes she鈥檚 doomed (no 鈥渢ribute鈥 from District 12 has won in decades), Katniss is too much of a fighter to go serenely to her death.
Her skill with a bow and arrow and her ability to find food in the woods may even the odds against competitors from wealthier districts who train with weapons all their lives. Her fellow tribute, the local baker鈥檚 son, Peeta, hits on a strategy: The two of them will act as star-crossed lovers to attract the sympathy of sponsors.
(Food and medicine can be parachuted in 鈥 for a price.)
Only Katniss isn鈥檛 sure Peeta is really acting. And as days pass, it becomes harder for her to tell what her real feelings are and what is just acting for the ever-present cameras.
Collins writes so close to the ground that a reader鈥檚 viewpoint becomes inseparable from that of Katniss. So we experience her amazement at the rich food and luxurious surroundings 鈥 as well as her fury at the obscene 鈥渆ntertainment鈥 that brings her to The Capitol.
When she鈥檚 being exfoliated, depilated, and in general, made camera-ready, she feels totally removed from her team of stylists.
鈥淚 know I should be embarrassed, but they鈥檙e so unlike people that I鈥檓 no more self-conscious than if a trio of oddly colored birds were pecking around my feet,鈥 Katniss says.
While readers might be expecting the familiar mix of spunky-yet-sensitive, Collins has crafted a different kind of action heroine. Katniss is not prone to considering the feelings of others, as Collins makes clear in the first pages.
She tried to drown a stray kitten her younger sister found, since it meant one more mouth for her to feed. (The cat has yet to forgive her.)
And she may be the least introspective teenage girl in the history of teenage girldom. In fact, Peeta, who tries to cling to his ideals in the face of government-sponsored murder, is the closest thing to a traditional hero District 12 has.
That is, if he鈥檚 telling Katniss the truth.
The book is considered suitable for readers 12 and up, but that would depend on the 12- (or even 13-) year-old.
Collins largely avoids graphic descriptions of violence, but a couple of the players鈥 deaths are emotionally disturbing. And although the story is set in the future, the totalitarian regime鈥檚 punishments can be downright medieval. (Katniss is waited on by a servant whose tongue was surgically removed for treason.)
But 鈥淭he Hunger Games鈥 is more than just an action novel waiting to be turned into a PG-13 movie. There are a bunch of big ideas driving the book, from the injustice of a few people living in comfort while the rest of the world goes hungry to the priority placed on entertainment in a society where many do without necessities.
There are historical parallels to everything from the Irish Potato Famine to World War II and Stalinist Russia.Once the action begins, these themes have to hang on by their fingernails, it鈥檚 true, but the high-octane plot can鈥檛 quite shake them.
I was assigned 鈥1984鈥 in the eighth grade, and certainly 鈥淭he Hunger Games鈥 is nowhere near as bleak as Orwell鈥檚 dystopia.
Besides, it would take more than a cage full of rats to knock the fight out of Katniss Everdeen.
Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews fiction for the Monitor.