Showing posts with label IMDb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMDb. Show all posts

Monday, August 22, 2011

The Hunger Games- Book Review and Entertaining Links

Borrowed from GoodReads.com

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins.
Published 2008 (384 pages)

Suzanne Collins’s The Hunger Game Trilogy has made an impact on young adults and adults alike. From a devoted following, a movie currently in production due to release next year (the second movie promised in 2013), and now as of June 6th  of this year- Collins’s book The Hunger Games makes her the 6th person to sell over 1 million kindle books. This last achievement has Collins join the Kindle Million Club.

The first book in the Trilogy is entitled The Hunger Games which turns out to be a televised reality version of The Most Dangerous Game (the short story is available free from Manybooks.net).  Although some might not like this Survivors  tv show perspective, before the games begin the audience is drawn in by Collins’s rich characters and vivid imagery.

Katniss Everdeen is the main character and though she is only 16, she is a real survivor and avid hunter. Through an unfortunate chance of fate she finds herself taken from all that she has ever known to go to the Capital. Collins allows Katniss to act as narrator and provide an anthropologist point of view of Panem, explaining the culture, history, and animal and plant life from the eyes of a teenager. These detailed explanations of a new world and society allows the reader to become connected emotionally to the main character.

The plot is mixed with a struggle against the unjust government in what is left of the world (formerly known as America now known as Panem) after natural disasters and man made destruction. What’s left is 12 districts, with the first district acting as controlling government known as the Capital. In a classic move to control by fear, every year the capital holds a “Hunger Game” in which one girl and one boy (called Tributes) from each district will fight to survive. Which is in a gladiator style, where only one person will survive. Similar to the Romans, if the Tributes do not provide enough entertainment, the game will suddenly change. No one, but the makers of the game, know where or what the Tributes will face: snow, desert, jungle, or maybe wetlands. And most likely deadly animals.

Warning: This book will have you reading late into the night and the ending of the first book will make you want to run out to get the second book, Catching Fire. This book is not meant for young children, as the details during the hunger games can be graphic. Worth the time to read, as the plot allows the reader to step back and wonder what they would do in a similar situation. Which is Collins at her best, pulling the reader in by wondering “what’s next?”

Links:
Author’s Official Website.

Publisher’s website: Scholastic.

The Hunger Games’s Official website.

The Hunger Games on Facebook.

The author on Facebook.

The Hunger Games Trilogy Fansite: “Comprehensive Fansite Dedicated to The Hunger Games Trilogy Fans”

Welcome to Mockingjay.net, the most visited source on the web dedicated to the Hunger Games! We were founded in July of 2009, before the title of the third book had been announced. We're here to have fun with other Hunger Games fans with discussion, contests, the Jabberjays podcast, and an up to date news blog that covers anything related to the books or the upcoming film that is being made by Lionsgate.”

The Hunger Games Wiki.

Official Movie website.

The Hunger Games, movie Information: IMDb.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

The Help- Book Review

Borrowed from GoodReads.com

The Help by Kathryn Stockett.
Published 2009.

In 1962 everything is normal. The white ladies are house wives and the black women are the workers. The workers are maids that make sure the white households are organized and are nannies to the white children. And then the black women go home and raise their own family- regardless of how tired or how horrible her day went. Yes, it is normal for Jackson, Mississippi in 1962. But Skeeter Phelan, a single white woman, is brave enough to wonder…does it have to be this way? In time Skeeter is able to convince two black maids, Aibileen and Minny, to help her with an idea; a plan to write a book from the point of view of the black maids who work for white women, the good and the terrible truths.

Most books choose first person or a third person perspective, but this book features both. With a majority of the story in first person, this book continues to jump around not with a singular main character, but three. This could have made the book appear jumpy, like movies that have too much going on and switching scenes before the audience is ready. However, Ms. Stockett’s writing style flowed from one woman to another. Making the reader feel like they were sitting in a room with three women, each telling a part of the story. With Aibileen, Minny, and Skeeter telling their stories together, the women cover gaps in time with updates about the time that had passed (the entire book covers about two years in 464 pages). The ending provides readers with closure, but as many books often do, a need for more information as the readers’ imagination must truly create the end for each woman.

Starting from August, 1962 until late 1964- Aibileen, Minny, and Skeeter live their lives and though they knew of each other it wasn’t until a hardship that brought them together. From virtual strangers (minus Aibileen’s and Minny’s relationship) to fearsome friends, these three women struggle with all aspects of their lives. From the strain on their friendships, hardships of work, and the stress of their families- they must also deal with the separation of color.

Since the author wrote like someone is talking, this book is not easy to read for those who are grammar sticklers. Learning a new dialect can be difficult, such as that used in the book The Color Purple by Alice Walker. I found reading sentences that used “a” as opposed to “of”  caused me to stumble and made me stop to think what the character was trying to say. Though this deep Southern dialect could trip me up at times, it was worth the effort when I found jewels of wisdom spoken by clever characters. One of the parts I bookmarked while reading on my kindle was on page 62 (location 1248 on Kindle), “Ugly live up on the inside. Ugly be a hurtful, mean person. Is you one a them peoples?” This was said by Constantine, Skeeter’s maid, when Skeeter was being bullied by the children at school who called her ugly. To personify “ugly” was very clever of Stockett, and is a good example of why her words will remain with her readers for years to come.

This is Stockett’s first book and hopefully not her last, as she has quite a following. And now with the movie coming out this weekend, more fans of her work. Though the book is long, it was worth the effort to allow the stories and emotions to marinate for the reader. To pull the reader in and become emotionally involved. To feel like crying when something horrible happens in the black community, to cheer on the women when they stood up for themselves, or smile when something special happened. Like when Aibileen took time  to tell Mae Mobley, Aibileen’s 17th white child, that the little girl was kind, smart, and important.

The Help is a book that allows the reader to have empathy for the characters. Anyone who has suffered from bullying, or rejection for who they are, can sympathize with the characters in this book. And for those readers who sympathize, they find a new treasured friend.

For a synopsis of the book please click here.

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Kathryn Stockett’s website and useful links found on it:

Q&A for The Help.

Kathryn Stockett, In Her Own Words (found at the end of the book and on Stockett’s website).

“In my book there is one line that I truly prize: Wasn’t that the point of the book?  For women to realize, we are just two people.  Not that much separates us.  Not nearly as much as I'd thought.”


The Movie:

The Help, the official movie website.
The Help, the movie information: The Internet Movie Database (IMDb)
The Help, reviews from RottenTomatoes.com