So, here we are. At the end of a trilogy. The last book. The end.
Unfortunately, when it comes to good books and characters we come to love, we all want happy endings. The problem is, they're not practical. Especially when they come at the conclusion of a particularly dark tale, such as The Hunger Games.
By Mockingjay, Katniss Everdeen has already been to hell and back. Now she is forced to bear the weight of an entire nation on her shoulders. Portrayed in the mass media as "the Mockingjay" -- taking the moniker of the only animal to live outside control of the totalitarian government of their society -- Katniss finds herself walking a fine line between hero and scapegoat of the people who support her. The realization that she is now responsible for hundreds of thousands of souls, all pushing her to lead them -- as well as for the deaths of many innocents -- is a weight almost too heavy for Katniss to bear. Yet she must fight on, now more than ever, since the one person who believed in her the most is now at the mercy of the cruel tyrants whom she opposes.
Mockingjay is easily the darkest and most heartbreaking of the trilogy. The author of one of the blogs I follow finished this a few days before I did, and mentioned that she was in tears for most of it. I didn't believe that I would be. Ha. Pride goeth before a fall. This volume, especially the final few chapters, is moving and heartbreaking. And without spoiling anything, I warn you here, as author William Goldman did in The Princess Bride -- "some of the wrong people die." Yet, I'd be remiss if I said that the entire book is dark, with no redemption or light. There is both, but it comes with a price.
I am so thankful that I finally listened to my cousins Mel and Jen, my aunt Cathi, and oh, everyone else in the literary world, and picked up this series. I loved it, from start to finish, and I was completely glued to it. I read three books in three days. It was excellent. I highly recommend all three. Please do go out and try them.
I laugh though, now, because I, like people on my friends list on FB and Goodreads, are left wondering "What to read next?" Finishing up a series of books is always difficult, even when some things are tied up. You've come to identify with the characters. You're left feeling that something's amiss. Where do you go from here?
Well, I don't know about everyone else, but today I pulled out that most famous trilogy, The Lord of the Rings. I made it through one of the books like, four years ago, but now I'm determined to finish them all. I started The Fellowship of the Ring today. We'll see where this takes me.
But I really will miss The Hunger Games. Until I read it again, that is. :)
Rating: **** (for Mockingjay), **** 1/2 for the trilogy as a whole)
Unfortunately, when it comes to good books and characters we come to love, we all want happy endings. The problem is, they're not practical. Especially when they come at the conclusion of a particularly dark tale, such as The Hunger Games.
By Mockingjay, Katniss Everdeen has already been to hell and back. Now she is forced to bear the weight of an entire nation on her shoulders. Portrayed in the mass media as "the Mockingjay" -- taking the moniker of the only animal to live outside control of the totalitarian government of their society -- Katniss finds herself walking a fine line between hero and scapegoat of the people who support her. The realization that she is now responsible for hundreds of thousands of souls, all pushing her to lead them -- as well as for the deaths of many innocents -- is a weight almost too heavy for Katniss to bear. Yet she must fight on, now more than ever, since the one person who believed in her the most is now at the mercy of the cruel tyrants whom she opposes.
Mockingjay is easily the darkest and most heartbreaking of the trilogy. The author of one of the blogs I follow finished this a few days before I did, and mentioned that she was in tears for most of it. I didn't believe that I would be. Ha. Pride goeth before a fall. This volume, especially the final few chapters, is moving and heartbreaking. And without spoiling anything, I warn you here, as author William Goldman did in The Princess Bride -- "some of the wrong people die." Yet, I'd be remiss if I said that the entire book is dark, with no redemption or light. There is both, but it comes with a price.
I am so thankful that I finally listened to my cousins Mel and Jen, my aunt Cathi, and oh, everyone else in the literary world, and picked up this series. I loved it, from start to finish, and I was completely glued to it. I read three books in three days. It was excellent. I highly recommend all three. Please do go out and try them.
I laugh though, now, because I, like people on my friends list on FB and Goodreads, are left wondering "What to read next?" Finishing up a series of books is always difficult, even when some things are tied up. You've come to identify with the characters. You're left feeling that something's amiss. Where do you go from here?
Well, I don't know about everyone else, but today I pulled out that most famous trilogy, The Lord of the Rings. I made it through one of the books like, four years ago, but now I'm determined to finish them all. I started The Fellowship of the Ring today. We'll see where this takes me.
But I really will miss The Hunger Games. Until I read it again, that is. :)
Rating: **** (for Mockingjay), **** 1/2 for the trilogy as a whole)
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