Overview of the Hunger Games Trilogy

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“I volunteer as tribute,” shouts Katniss Everdeen on Reaping day in District 12 as her younger sister apprehensively walks to the platform after her name is drawn. From this pivotal moment, readers instantly become engrossed and obsessed with the trilogy, “The Hunger Games,” and the succeeding novels; “Catching Fire,” and “Mockingjay” by Suzanne Collins. This moment of strength and fear for the life of a sister, exposes the world to a heroine like never before and a story like no other. The setting of “The Hunger Games,” takes place in a futuristic world that punishes the citizens of the districts around a capital, Panem. The citizens in the districts are punished for a revolt that almost destroyed the country years ago, with an annual and televised fight to the death (Reno). The fight is named, The Hunger Games, and is centered around twenty-four young citizens fighting until only one is left standing. With its fierce characters, enthralling plot that keeps you on your toes, and deep morals of life; “The Hunger Games” trilogy is a book series worth reading.
The characters in “The Hunger Games” are everything but the conventional stereotypes. A far cry from a damsel in distress, Katniss Everdeen, the main character, is actually the one who saves the men and starts a rebellion for a better tomorrow in the fictional world of Panem. With skills that can rival the best men, and a heart full of love, Katniss is an admirable female protagonist from beginning to end (Sullivan 2). For the love of her family, Katniss puts herself in danger everyday by disobeying the law and crossing the border of district 12 to illegally hunt for food. For the love of a sister, Katniss sacrifices herself for the games in place of her young sister, Primr...

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...Hunger Games” book trilogy is still a story that will keep readers wanting more. From the first page in the first book to the last page in the third book, the characters, plot, and underlying morals will keep readers rooting for a new breed of hero and striving to be a stronger individual that could endure just as much and still make the most out of it.

Works Cited

Dockterman, Eliana. "Teen-Heroine Smackdown: 5 Ways Katniss Is Better Than Bella." Time.Com (2013): 1. Business Source Premier. Web. 3 Dec. 2013.
Reno, Jamie. "Save My Kids From 'The Hunger Games'" The Daily Beast. Newsweek/Daily
Beast, 20 Mar. 2012. Web. 10 Dec. 2013.
Sullivan, Christina Chant. "Disturbing (Or Not?) Young Adult Fiction." Horn Book Magazine
89.5 (2013): 51. MasterFILE Premier. Web. 10 Dec. 2013

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