10/27/2012

SUZANNE COLLINS’ MOCKINGJAY: DARK, BRUTAL, SAVAGE STATEMENT AGAINST WAR




RATING GUIDE:
 
5 – A keeper!   
4 – Very good
3 –  Passable
2 –  I’d rather read a telephone book
1 – An absolute bomb.  Read at your own risk!



If I were asked to describe this book in three words, they would be dark, brutal and savage.  This book was actually torture to read, from beginning to end.  But it’s not because it was badly written.  In fact, Suzanne Collins paints such a grim picture of war at its worst that you would actually wonder why war still exists. 

In Mockingjay, the last installment in Suzanne Collins’ trilogy, Katniss has decided to lead the revolution against the evil President Snow.  Gale has turned into a bomb expert, while Peeta has become President Snow’s ultimate weapon against Katniss (you have to find out how this happened.  It’s so telenovela-like, but so riveting!)  At this point in time, they are just shadows of the teenagers they once were.  All of them have somehow turned into pawns of the powers-that-be, or hunters or killers.  Their transformation is actually painful to read about, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.  Suzanne Collins paints such a terrifying picture of the final showdown, so to speak, that reading about it makes you want to close your eyes and fling the book across the room.  My mind screamed in horror as I read about Katniss’ last, painful moment with her sister Prim.  The book is that horrifying and compelling.

As painful as it was to read this book, it does have a happy ending of sorts (I won’t tell you whether Katniss chose Gale or Peeta in the end, you’ll have to find out for yourself).  But the ending is mostly bitter than sweet, a grim reminder from Suzanne Collins that in war, no one really wins … and it’s the young who lose the most.  Katniss went through so much in this book that I really wanted her to die so she could finally have some peace.  No one deserves a life like hers.

I don’t know about you, but this book scared the crap out of me.  I think it’s because the world Suzanne Collins created in her trilogy is something I can envision happening, if mankind isn’t careful.  Who’s to say the Hunger Games won’t ever happen?  We already live in a world where our resources are fast dwindling and prices of the most basic of commodities are skyrocketing.  Suzanne Collins’ world could be the world we’d be living in.  If that’s not enough to scare you, I don’t know what is.

RATING:  5

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