Meredith Holley's Reviews > The Hunger Games
The Hunger Games (The Hunger Games, #1)
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Meredith Holley's review
bookshelves: classic-young-adult, young-adult, utopia-dystopia, girls-rule, reviewed, chosen-girls
Sep 20, 2008
bookshelves: classic-young-adult, young-adult, utopia-dystopia, girls-rule, reviewed, chosen-girls
For a long time now, I’ve wanted to rewrite my review of The Hunger Games so that I could tell you why I don’t just love this series, but why I also think it’s important. It is beautiful for the unflinching way it shows you, as a reader, your own willingness to disregard people who are different from you - how you are the Capitol audience. But, it is important as a story about girls. I had not initially thought about articulating that point because it seemed so obvious to me, and I am bad at recognizing my own assumptions. Lately, though, I have seen so many people, both men and women, acting as though this remarkable book is a piece of fluff that I realized maybe what I love most about The Hunger Games is not as obvious as it seems. To me, this series is important because it is a landmark departure from the traditional story about girls.
Too often, stories objectify women. But the word “objectify,� I’ve realized, has almost no meaning for someone who has either not experienced objectification or who hasn’t really recognized it in her own life, so I’m going to be more descriptive here. When I say stories objectify girls, I mean they talk about girls as though they are that sometimes have handy dandy extra gadgets such as an all-purpose cleaning mechanism and food dispensing function.
Sidebar: if you are inclined to now google the word "fleshlight," I encourage you to consult the before doing that, as the google results will probably be NSFW and also NSF those of you whose parents might check your browsing history. Do parents know how to do that? Sorry for the sidebar, I am just intending to make an explicit point, and now I am feeling uncomfortable about what that explicit point might mean to the target audience of this book. Girls, you are probably badass like Katniss, and you are definitely not a fleshlight.
Back to my rant about typical objectification in storytelling: often thegirls fleshlights have fancy outer designs because it makes the fleshlights happy to be fancy. Sometimes they have skeeeeeery castration functions, and other times they work as helpful databases for music or video games or whatever UR into. A lot of times, I will hear people refer to this type of objectification as treating women like they are just a vagina, or a pair of boobs, but I think there is something to the stories that is less human and more sexbot machine than that complaint covers.
So, in all of those links, I have tried to include books written by men and by women because I think that women think of ourselves this way almost as often as men think of us this way. The link from The Ugly Truth, for example, shows both a man and a woman treating women like fleshlights. I have also included both books I love and books I hate because, ultimately, I do think girls adopt this story about themselves, and I also think we can pretty easily identify with a male protagonist and disregard female characters who look nothing like humans. For example, The Sun Also Rises is one of my favorite books in the whole world, even though it does not contain any women who resonate with my experience of humans. And I don't think it's necessarily bad that I can enjoy stories where women are only fleshlights, as long as I can still be whoever I want to be without a positive role model. I think it's good to enjoy stories and take what we can get from them, and so I don't regret that I love The Sun Also Rises.
In seeing some male reactions to The Hunger Games, I am reminded that most men do not identify with female protagonists the way women have been trained to identify with male protagonists. This seems like a huge disadvantage for men to be in, to me, and if you are a man reading this review, I would ask you to check out your bookshelves. How many female authors are on your shelves? How many of the books those authors wrote have no central male character? If you have a minute after that, check the shelves of a woman you are friends with and see how many of her books were written by men or have no central female character. Odds are the results will be pretty different.
The Hunger Games is such a groundbreaking and deliberate example of a woman’s perspective on war and family and even men that it floors me. I think it partly floors me because, other than Buffy, I can’t think of another example of a female character who really fights for herself in such an obvious and hopeful way. Katniss is strong and broken, and powerful in her brokenness. Collins’s image of a woman’s perspective is not, admittedly, as effortless as Moira Young’s in Blood Red Road, but its deliberateness has its own value.
It is not an accident that the story shows Katniss’s emotional growth and that Peeta, as a more emotionally whole person, facilitates her emotional growth. It is not an accident that the story does not discuss the effect Katniss has on the erectness of Peeta’s and Gale’s penises. The first is not an accident because in reality, men do not have to be the emotional cowards that the stories I’ve linked to above make them out to be. Masculinity does not have to mean emotional cowardice. The second is not an accident because the story is not from Peeta and Gale’s perspectives. Despite widespread rumors to the contrary, it is my experience that women pretty seldom think about their effect on men’s penises. Hopefully, we never think of our primary purpose in life, in the way so many stories think of it, as making penises erect. Hopefully, we never think of ourselves as gadgets that are super fun for other people.
There are so many reasons I love The Hunger Games series, and all of this is one I wouldn’t have initially even thought to say. I saw this Eleanor Roosevelt quote earlier this month, and it said, “It is better to light one small candle than to curse the darkness.� I think The Hunger Games is a candle in the overall dark narrative of girls� perspective on life. Yes, it is also a poignant critique of reality TV and Western callousness about the catastrophes caused by industrialization in the developing world, but that, too, resonates with me in many ways because of its remarkably feminine voice. It absolutely makes sense to me that this book is not for everyone because of its violence, but I still think that it is objectively important because it shows a perspective that seems authentically feminine to me � that talks like a girl, not like a sexy, fancy gadget. I’m not saying that in my opinion girls don’t or shouldn’t ever think about being sexy or erect penises, I’m just saying that it is my experience that we think and care about many, many more things than penises, clean houses, and food, and very, very few stories are willing to tell you about that. The Hunger Games is one that does, and it does so in way that is beautiful and important.
Too often, stories objectify women. But the word “objectify,� I’ve realized, has almost no meaning for someone who has either not experienced objectification or who hasn’t really recognized it in her own life, so I’m going to be more descriptive here. When I say stories objectify girls, I mean they talk about girls as though they are that sometimes have handy dandy extra gadgets such as an all-purpose cleaning mechanism and food dispensing function.
Sidebar: if you are inclined to now google the word "fleshlight," I encourage you to consult the before doing that, as the google results will probably be NSFW and also NSF those of you whose parents might check your browsing history. Do parents know how to do that? Sorry for the sidebar, I am just intending to make an explicit point, and now I am feeling uncomfortable about what that explicit point might mean to the target audience of this book. Girls, you are probably badass like Katniss, and you are definitely not a fleshlight.
Back to my rant about typical objectification in storytelling: often the
So, in all of those links, I have tried to include books written by men and by women because I think that women think of ourselves this way almost as often as men think of us this way. The link from The Ugly Truth, for example, shows both a man and a woman treating women like fleshlights. I have also included both books I love and books I hate because, ultimately, I do think girls adopt this story about themselves, and I also think we can pretty easily identify with a male protagonist and disregard female characters who look nothing like humans. For example, The Sun Also Rises is one of my favorite books in the whole world, even though it does not contain any women who resonate with my experience of humans. And I don't think it's necessarily bad that I can enjoy stories where women are only fleshlights, as long as I can still be whoever I want to be without a positive role model. I think it's good to enjoy stories and take what we can get from them, and so I don't regret that I love The Sun Also Rises.
In seeing some male reactions to The Hunger Games, I am reminded that most men do not identify with female protagonists the way women have been trained to identify with male protagonists. This seems like a huge disadvantage for men to be in, to me, and if you are a man reading this review, I would ask you to check out your bookshelves. How many female authors are on your shelves? How many of the books those authors wrote have no central male character? If you have a minute after that, check the shelves of a woman you are friends with and see how many of her books were written by men or have no central female character. Odds are the results will be pretty different.
The Hunger Games is such a groundbreaking and deliberate example of a woman’s perspective on war and family and even men that it floors me. I think it partly floors me because, other than Buffy, I can’t think of another example of a female character who really fights for herself in such an obvious and hopeful way. Katniss is strong and broken, and powerful in her brokenness. Collins’s image of a woman’s perspective is not, admittedly, as effortless as Moira Young’s in Blood Red Road, but its deliberateness has its own value.
It is not an accident that the story shows Katniss’s emotional growth and that Peeta, as a more emotionally whole person, facilitates her emotional growth. It is not an accident that the story does not discuss the effect Katniss has on the erectness of Peeta’s and Gale’s penises. The first is not an accident because in reality, men do not have to be the emotional cowards that the stories I’ve linked to above make them out to be. Masculinity does not have to mean emotional cowardice. The second is not an accident because the story is not from Peeta and Gale’s perspectives. Despite widespread rumors to the contrary, it is my experience that women pretty seldom think about their effect on men’s penises. Hopefully, we never think of our primary purpose in life, in the way so many stories think of it, as making penises erect. Hopefully, we never think of ourselves as gadgets that are super fun for other people.
There are so many reasons I love The Hunger Games series, and all of this is one I wouldn’t have initially even thought to say. I saw this Eleanor Roosevelt quote earlier this month, and it said, “It is better to light one small candle than to curse the darkness.� I think The Hunger Games is a candle in the overall dark narrative of girls� perspective on life. Yes, it is also a poignant critique of reality TV and Western callousness about the catastrophes caused by industrialization in the developing world, but that, too, resonates with me in many ways because of its remarkably feminine voice. It absolutely makes sense to me that this book is not for everyone because of its violence, but I still think that it is objectively important because it shows a perspective that seems authentically feminine to me � that talks like a girl, not like a sexy, fancy gadget. I’m not saying that in my opinion girls don’t or shouldn’t ever think about being sexy or erect penises, I’m just saying that it is my experience that we think and care about many, many more things than penises, clean houses, and food, and very, very few stories are willing to tell you about that. The Hunger Games is one that does, and it does so in way that is beautiful and important.
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Reading Progress
September 20, 2008
– Shelved
Started Reading
February 5, 2009
–
Finished Reading
March 6, 2009
– Shelved as:
classic-young-adult
March 6, 2009
– Shelved as:
young-adult
March 8, 2009
– Shelved as:
utopia-dystopia
March 1, 2010
– Shelved as:
girls-rule
August 1, 2010
– Shelved as:
reviewed
May 9, 2012
– Shelved as:
chosen-girls
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Linda
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I hate to be sexist, but it's my experience that men tend to not cross over to identifying with girl protagonists as easily as women cross over to identifying with boy protagonists. Obviously, that's not always true with every book or every reader, but in this case I could see the first-person narrative and present tense making it more of an issue for a male reader. Also, it's mostly an adventure. The adventure is based on the dystopian setting, but Collins doesn't go very far with developing the world. I prefer that, but I can see how someone who likes the sci fi/fantasy style of creating alternate universes might find it too simplistic. I'm not sure if that answers your question. I'm kind of comparing it to Ender's Game in my head. Where I think that book is classified as YA because it is about kids, but is really directed toward a more adult audience, I think Hunger Games is directed toward a high school audience, but contains some profound themes.




My wife does, however, state that she takes pride in making more impressive bodily function noises than most men she knows.

Anyway ... I'm thinking of buying The Hunger Games for my 13-year-old niece but wanted to get your opinion first. She's a smart girl who loves to read and aspires to be a writer someday, but she's also somewhat sheltered by her hyper-conservative parents. So I guess a couple of factors are making me hesitate before buying this book for her. First, do you think 13 is too young? And second, would this book be too much of a shock to a sheltered 13-yr-old girl, or do you think it would make a good introduction to real-world books (i.e., books where the protagonist has bigger problems than which book of the Bible to read after she does all her homework and before she goes to bed early like a good girl)?
The other issue is whether I might piss off the hyper-conservative parents by getting her this book ... but that's for me to worry about ... though you can feel free to comment ...
Thanks, Meredith! Any advice would be appreciated!

If I could, I think I would assign this book as reading to 13-year-old girls. That's not to say she'll necessarily like it, but I would think it's a good bet. It's really adventurey and not overtly political at all. If I taught an 8th grade social studies class, I would use it as an intro to global issues, just because I think Collins does such a good job at simplifying major political problems, without even pointing out what she's doing. I really don't think, though, that if you didn't have those issues in mind you would even make the connection. It's pure story. I think that's a good thing about it, because I don't think you change people's minds by yelling at them to change their minds. I think it's better to show an example.
Also, of all the female roll models in teen books I can think of (and admittedly I can only think of four right now, because my brain is mush from civ pro final this morning), I think Katniss is the most inspiring. There's always Buffy (not book, but still), but that is way more adult, and probably wouldn't go over too well with the parents.
I said above to Linda that maybe it was too scary, but she read it and loved it. (I'm not calling you a 13-year-old girl, Linda, if you're reading this :) ) I think I just freaked out a little bit at this one part for some random reason, because no one else has seemed to have that reaction.
The way you describe your niece is exactly how I was raised (if you also throw the word "crazy" between "hyper-conservative" and "parents"), so sometimes I have a little bit of a radar for Things Invented by Satan. I don't think this would fall in that category. It's just post-apocalyptic, so no magic, monsters, or Mao. Plus, it's on sale at grocery stores, so easy shopping! Okay, I don't know why I had to write such a long comment to respond to this question. Maybe practice finals have made it impossible for me to answer stuff in under 750 words. *sigh*
Hi Ian & Meredith!
I just read this not long ago - review still not written - and it was teh awesome. I find that the hyper-conservative get much more worked up about sex than violence, but results vary, and this is v. tame in the sex department. Compulsively readable, too. 13 seems a perfect age to encounter this, but 35 wasn't bad either.
I just read this not long ago - review still not written - and it was teh awesome. I find that the hyper-conservative get much more worked up about sex than violence, but results vary, and this is v. tame in the sex department. Compulsively readable, too. 13 seems a perfect age to encounter this, but 35 wasn't bad either.

I reeeeaally liked it - but I'm still grappling with some stuff, and I haven't had an aha! moment where I know what to say yet, which puts it squarely in the amazing category. I just picked up Gregor the Overlander from the library, and I'm looking forward to diving in...thanks for the recommendation.

Gregor's different, but also wonderful. I might read them again over winter break.

And for my nephew, who is ten, I was thinking of Peter and the Starcatchers, which is in your reading list. If you don't mind spending a few more minutes helping out an old GR friend, what can you tell me about that one?
"... sometimes I have a little bit of a radar for Things Invented by Satan. ... It's just post-apocalyptic, so no magic, monsters, or Mao. ..."
Boy you have my sister-in-law and her husband pegged ... sometimes I don't know what they fear more, magic, monsters or Mao. Probably Mao.
Oh hey and sorry to bug you in the middle of finals ... 1-L finals were about ten years ago for me and I do recall what they were like ...
It really is so much easier to do the hatecast - boy, it's so much fun to put the knives in - and I don't want to do The Hunger Games a disservice.
Ian wrote: And for my nephew, who is ten, I was thinking of Peter and the Starcatchers,
I just bought this for my ten year old nephew! I haven't read it, but it looks pretty sparkly.
I just bought this for my ten year old nephew! I haven't read it, but it looks pretty sparkly.

I haven't read Beautiful Creatures. Just from reading the synopsis, I'd think you'd be in danger of crossing the sex line there. Also, the "curse" thing might bring up a minor lecture on witches. Never fun. But, I'm not sure, though. I haven't heard anything about it. I'll probably wait on that one until the high school girls tell me it's a must-read.
I think I Capture the Castle is a really under-read teen book. It's not adventure, more domestic coming-of-age, so it might be more boring. I'm not sure. Does your niece love reading, or are you trying to seduce her into reading?
I adore Peter and the Starcatchers. I think Peter Pan is my favorite children's book, so for me to love something that uses the story says a lot, I think. I'm not super forgiving with inferior adaptations. I would make sure that your nephew has read Peter Pan first, but maybe that's just me being protective of it. I would hate for someone to think the Peter Pan story came second, or something. Nightmare! Peter and the Starcatchers is really wonderful, though. I listened to it on audio, and the reader was amazing, but I think I would have loved it either way.
And C - exactly!
I have a sickness where I recommend Ursula K LeGuin books in all contexts, but
A Wizard of Earthsea
is just a painfully awesome - and secretly about Taoism! Mmmm, subversive YA goodness.

Okay, then Peter and the Starcatchers sounds perfect for my nephew. Thanks, guys :)
Meredith wrote: Does your niece love reading, or are you trying to seduce her into reading?
Is it okay if we don't use the word "seduce" in the same sentence as me and my niece? That really weirds me out. But I get what you're asking, and the answer is both. Yes she loves reading (at least, I think she does, as I only see her a few times a year but I know reading and writing are two of her favorite pastimes), and yes I'm hoping to "encourage" her to read stuff that's almost certainly of higher quality than what her parents are giving her.
I also agree about sex v. violence. I used to be a hyper-conservative myself, and in that youthful age I definitely was more bothered by sex. Funny, now that I've grown up to be an anything-goes libertarian, I'm much more bothered by violence. I won't include Beautiful Creatures in my Xmas package this year.

I'm definitely okay with that. Insert "scam" or "trick" into sentence. I probably need to read A Wizard of Earthsea, too. I've never gotten into LeGuin, but wanted to. I started The Left Hand of Darkness, but I can't push through the descriptions of cultures and languages in books like these. I think I ODed on Star Trek when I was 10, so if anything gets close to it I get a rash. If I had only known about moderation then . . .
Or maybe I was just in the wrong mood. I don't know.
Meredith wrote: I've never gotten into LeGuin, but wanted to. I started The Left Hand of Darkness, but I can't push through the descriptions of cultures and languages in books like these.
That's cool; everyone's got their things, and their not-things. Changing Planes might be a good UKL gateway drug - is this an inappropriate metaphor?
That's cool; everyone's got their things, and their not-things. Changing Planes might be a good UKL gateway drug - is this an inappropriate metaphor?


Keeping in mind a household that thinks Harry Potter is Satanic and has stunted their 13-yr-old's maturity level, do you guys have any recommendations for my sheltered niece?

Keeping in mind a household that thinks Harry Potter is Satanic and has stunted their 13-yr-old's maturity level, do you guys have any recommendations for my sheltered niece?

The only thing they would have a problem with in Hunger Games is if it's too scary. I really can't think of anything else Evil in it. Oh, I just googled it and "church" and this one church's website said to talk to your kids about "rage" if they read the book. Again, the scary thing, I think.
You could also go with Suzanne Collins' kid series Gregor the Overlander, which is wonderful. It's a little more on the magic line, because it has some fantasy characters - but the trick with that is pointing out that it's like Tolkien, who was a Christian. The bummer about that is that the boy's the main character. Still fun for a girl, though.
There's always Kate Dicamillo, too. I really love her, and she just came out with a new book. I haven't read it, yet. The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane is always a good gift, I think. They're the kind of books that I think someone could really read at any age.
I still put I Capture the Castle on the table. It's by the same author who wrote 101 Dalmatians, and I really love it. I have a friend who loves that book and spends six hours on a Sunday at church and wouldn't let her boyfriend hold her hand. She's not 13, but still some similarities?
Or, a classic, maybe? Sense & Sensibility? Jane Eyre?
The problem I think you run into in that situation is that (in my opinion) those restrictions are also partly based in marketing tactics, so you're kind of limited to buying at your local Christian Supply. I don't necessarily think it's as explicit as that, but I think it's what it is. I ODed on Christian romance right after my Star Trek phase, and I can't abide the books, but I have a friend who really loves the book Redeeming Love, by Francine Rivers. You'd probably get by with that one (maybe too grown up?)
You could always give her Harry Potter. :) Good luck!
I take back the LeGuin recommendation - I have a very unsubtle understanding of the ins and outs of these sort of restrictions, and it's just chock-full of magic - no sex & not much violence though!
Have you tried Phillip Pullman? He's got a lovely series called His Dark Materials - all about the church! Now I'm just being snarky; let me wipe away my tears from laughing about what a horrible recommendation this is.
This is super old-school, but I LOVED Madeleine L'Engle at that age. She's Christian, although Catholic, and I think sometimes the evangelicals think the Catholics are worse than the dirty atheists. But again, I don't have a nuanced appreciation of all the religious in-fights. The Arm of the Starfish I really loved, but it's been 20 years since I read it.
Have you tried Phillip Pullman? He's got a lovely series called His Dark Materials - all about the church! Now I'm just being snarky; let me wipe away my tears from laughing about what a horrible recommendation this is.
This is super old-school, but I LOVED Madeleine L'Engle at that age. She's Christian, although Catholic, and I think sometimes the evangelicals think the Catholics are worse than the dirty atheists. But again, I don't have a nuanced appreciation of all the religious in-fights. The Arm of the Starfish I really loved, but it's been 20 years since I read it.

I keep looking for the Golden Compass in hardcover, because I love it so, and everywhere has the other two in hardcover, but not that one. That's just a random complaint that I'm glad to be able to file somewhere.

I wish I could provide some recommendations but it's been so long since I was up on young adult books. I liked the author Tamora Pierce, always very strong young women as the main character. I think the first book of her Song of the Lioness series emphasized knighthood instead of magic.

I'll also whip out the good ol', "Well, if you're afraid to even read/watch it, hasn't Satan already won?" Then, they would be like, "I'm not afraid, I just prefer to set my mind on uplifting things." Then I could be like, "This is uplifting to me." See how I did that?


I had already put Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility in my Amazon cart thinking I couldn't go wrong with those. Then my wife texted her sister to make sure they didn't already have those books ... her sister's response was "no thanks, we already have both of those movies." When my wife clarified that we were specifically asking about the books, her sister said we need not bother buying books because my niece "already reads for her English class."
Robert wrote: A visit from a social worker?
Robert, you don't know the half of it. I don't think the allotted 12,000 characters for this post gives me enough room to list everything my sister-in-law and her husband are doing wrong as parents (at least, in my humble opinion).
I think I'm going to get books for my niece and nephew anyway. They don't need more crap to play with. I'll just have to hope the kids will find their own motivation to read since their parents clearly aren't going to encourage anything resembling an intellectual pursuit. I don't see them enough to be effective (we're in NorCal and they're in SoCal). When the kids were younger my wife and I would host them at our house for a couple weeks during the summer. I think we need to start doing that again. The sad thing is that I really do think my niece actually loves reading and writing ... she's just not getting any parental support.

Ian, again, good luck! I didn't realize it was so bad that they consider movies good substitutes. Then you don't have to think, right?

But my parents' radar might miss I Capture the Castle and it would probably pass inspection- it is great and like a coming-of-age Austen. That the writer also penned 101 Dalmatians and that the book is older and English might swing things even further in the a-okay way. I wish I had read it earlier, back when I was consuming large volumes of Christian crap romance (Grace Livingston Hill, Janette Oke...)and sneaking V.C. Andrews in at recesses.

Lemony Snickett is a great other suggestion! Those are fun and silly.



If she was a bit older I would recommend Leif Enger's Peace Like a River. Mike Snyder also is pretty good- My Name is Russell Fink (haven't read Return Policy). He writes a lot like Coupland and Russo...If she were into a series- Stephen Lawhead has one on a Welsh retelling of Robin Hood- the second or third one won a Christian writing award my man was one of the judges for....
I would still stick with I Capture the Castle, though- check out the reviews on it; it is well loved.
