Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Giving to Gnarnia?

I know that's not how you spell Narnia but its an Epic Movie reference? Right now I'm reading The Giver and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. The Giver is interesting to say the least. The utopia presented in it is very systematic, culturing society within its youth since their birth. Every baby in the whole community celebrates their birthday on the same day, no matter when the baby was born. They also stop celebrating birthdays after twelve, the same age they get assigned a job for the rest of their lives. The only choice and variety kids really have is what they play with and where they volunteer their time at. This type of society would be an awful change for me. Freedom is something I've had since my birth, and every birthday I could celebrate that freedom in my own way. I see similarities because somethings are regulated,such as school, so that people aren't just bums. Other than that we get to choose our own path and our own future. No one can choose what job I am going to have except for me and the company I apply at. Within the net year I'll even choose what place I want to further my education at. Choice wont create a utopia but it will create adventure and happiness because wherever I end up will be on my own accord, not predetermined by someone else.

Narnia is also good. The movie followed the book very closely and up to this point is a very good visual representation of what has occurred in the book. Its also an easier read than I thought it was going to be. Its just a two hundred page story book, a long version of Peter Pan maybe.   ?

Friday, August 26, 2011

Friday Post?

I took the personality test and I was a Rational Mastermind? I think that the test was pretty accurate and well done. I think it was spot on about alot of stuff. Some of the questions seemed rather absurd when I was doing the test though.

Currently?

Reading:
Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

Read:
Brisingr 
 The Hunger Games

Ending the Games

I finished The Hunger Games? I appreciate the way it ended because it just ended. It didn't need to be a happy ending, and it shouldn't have been. I like that, even though it wasn't the true ending (because there are still two more books), that the ending was kind of sad. Some books I can't stand because they always have a happy ending just to appeal to society. The Hunger Games are an tense, epic, series of fighting and political scheming and it is a blow and a shame to any book when they ruin the intensity of the previous pages just to have a happy ending. Happy endings are for fairy tales and "feel good" books, and not every book needs to have one. Even in fantasy or any type of fictional genre some realism should be added. I think that authors can add this realism through endings and plot twists. In a series or single novel if one main character doesn't die or have something tragic happen to them it isn't complete. To feel emotionally connected to a character and a book a reader needs to be taken through almost every emotion. If the author is continually ending everything picture perfectly a reader never has the opportunity to experience a whole expanse of emotions such as grief, sadness, pain, or loss. Again I appreciate The Hunger Games because there was a proper and fitting ending to the novel and because it leads me to believe that there will be more similar, sad twist to come in the next two books. I respect that as a reader and look forward to starting Catching Fire?

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

The Hunger Games?

SO, I started and have almost finished The Hunger Games, in a span of about three days. The other night was when I read the bulk of it and the words had a complete grip over my every thought and action, which amounted to my ever so constant thought, "I wonder what is going to happen next?" and my continuous cycled actions of reading and turning the pages. After reading most of the book I started to think why it was so intriguing, and this is what I came to conclude:

Characters: I usually prefer the main character of a book to be male, not because I'm sexist or anything of the sort, but because I can relate to them better. Katniss completely blew my stereotype out of the water though. This is the first book where I've ever felt empathy and really connected to a female character. Her will to fight, not always for herself, but her for her family is something I can really relate too. Her sense of self worth and pride as she always tries to pay back her debt and allows her word to be her bond and oath. Her extreme determination to keep trying even though the odds are against her, and especially, her outbursts of rage as she struggles against the world. I could even relate to her confusion with all the political scheming and her conflicting emotions about who she really liked and about her future. Katniss is truly an admirable character and an embodiment of a fighter, I look forward to reading more in the next book, Catching Fire.

Plot: The plot, although extreme, is right on the money about life for me. Everyday people are struggling and you see all the good that you could do in the world but its hard enough to get by without helping others. Your priorities are sorted by necessity and thus you end up just looking out for yourself and family. One person can only do so much in the place their put in and sometimes its an accomplishment just to survive. This is how life is in District 12. Then the games begin and I see characters being thrown into turmoil and tricky situations. There is a nonstop cycle of trying to beat someone out or trying to impress an important person so maybe they'll help you in the future. The more the characters, and essentially us, try to escape the more fate bears down on them and forces them to realize that this is their path and its better to embrace it then to fight it. After fate knocks the characters down they realize there is no escape, just wiggle room in which to plant rebellion. Limited space and time in which sticking it to the man is possible and while they may not be able to escape, they can bend the rules to their favor. In the end of the games its not really who is better, its who can think the best. Society today is exactly the same. Governments and bosses and teachers and administrators all try and get you to do what they want. Do the job you've been assigned to. Not everyone is given an equally hard assignment but everyone has to follow the rules or be punished in some way, whether it be a poor grade, expulsion, or even being fired, everyone has to suffer their consequence. Those who succeed aren't always those who get the best grades or score highest in the SAT, its who outsmarts everyone else. The one kid who sucks up to the teacher might just be given that extra grade bump at the end of the semester, the guy who brings in donuts and works hard, staying late sometimes gets the promotion over the guy with the better ideas. Just as Katniss sows her small signs of rebellion throughout the games: the pin, volunteering for a job nobody wants, winning in a losing district, or appearing to commit suicide with Peeta at the end of the games; we must approach life with the same type of attitude. We ought to use the little freedoms that we have under the rules to be creative and change the rules to our favor. Show the "Capitols" of life that we have just as much right to make the rules as they do and that were free to do what we want.


This has been a long post but I can't stop talking about this book and the impact it can have if you look below the surface at all the symbols. I would strongly recommend reading it and hope that I'll find the last few chapters as riveting as the previous pages.