Showing posts with label Dystopia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dystopia. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

Spinning Yarns

I have just enough time to get a post in before the end of April.  I've been knitting like crazy this month and while I was knitting, I listened to a couple of books.  I listened to the Wizard of Oz read beautifully by Anne Hathaway.  I had never read the Wizard of Oz before, though I loved the movie as a kid.  It was fun to compare the book to the movie and, of course, a lot more happens in the book.  I really enjoyed the story.  I wish I had read it as a kid though.  One's perspective is so different as a kid and I wish I had read this book with a kid's perspective.  It's a wonderful fairy tale adventure and deserves a place in a young person's psyche.

Another book I listened to was Among the Hidden by Margaret Haddix Peterson.  This is a distopian novel, a genre much requested by the 5th graders at Marshall Lane, and the first in its series.  I'm interested in getting them as many distopian books as I can but I feel I need to read them first.  Distopian fiction tends to be a bit depressing but also presents the reader with an interesting thought experiment.  Take a flaw from current society, magnify it, and follow it through to its worst case scenario conclusion.  Could this really happen?  What would the world be like if it did?  Anyway, it was an interesting story but it lacks conclusion because the first book is a set up for the rest of the series.

I'm currently listening to Fablehaven by Brandon Mull.  I like the story but I don't care for the reader's voice so it's a bit distracting.

And here's what I've been knitting:

I finished a pair of sweaters for Ms. Wright's twin boys who will be joining the world soon.

I also made this sweet little doll inspired by the book Coraline by Neil Gaiman.  The book is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year and it's one of my favorites.  Here Coraline is wearing her blue coat with a hood, her red scarf and her yellow Wellington boots.  She's holding the seeing stone given to her by Miss Spink and Miss Forcible and she's ready to go exploring.


Also, you might have heard that I bought a spinning wheel.  Here is some of the yarn that I've spun on my spinning wheel.  (The big lumpy one is my very first skein!)


In other knitting news, last week was the last meeting of the Sticks and Strings knitting class.  Miss Colleen has done a very nice write up of it here.  I'm going to post the coin purse on Ravelry soon, I'll let you know when I do. 

So that's my kidlit and knitting news.  


Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The Hunger Games

Whew! I finished listening to The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins this afternoon. What a ride! I can see what all the excitement is about now. This book is not available in the Marshall Lane Library but I've had quite a few 5th graders ask for it so I thought I should read it for myself so I could say why it's not in our library. It is a YA title. It's pretty dark and violent. If you haven't read it yet and care about such things, from here on out there be SPOILERS.
The story takes place sometime in the distant future of an Earth-like world. Climate change has made resources scarce and after a series of wars, North America seems to have emerged as a new country called Panem consisting of the Capitol and 12 surrounding districts. The 13 district was crushed by the Capitol in a failed uprising. Each district has a specific function, for instance, district 12 mines the coal, district 11 grows food, etc., however, resources are scarce and most seem to go to the Capitol first. Starvation is common in many of the districts. A district may earn more food for a year by offering a "tribute" to the Hunger Games. A tribute is a child of the district between the age of 12 and 18 who is sent to the Capitol to battle the "tributes" from the other districts to the death in a huge arena that mimics a type of environment and is manipulated by the "game makers." Every year each district sends two tributes, 1 boy and 1 girl, to the Hunger Games from which only one can emerge victorious and 23 must die. The games are televised and people are encouraged to sponsor their favorite players. This adds a twist to the game play because if players win the favor of the audience, they may earn special items to help them in the game. It's like Survivor on steroids. Katniss and Peeta are the tributes from District 12, a district that has not produced a champion in over 30 years. Once the tributes are selected they are shipped off to the capitol and treated as the celebrities du jour. They are given make overs and weapons training and they are coached on strategies and how to win the favor of the audience. As it turns out, Peeta carries a torch for Katniss, which Katniss finds out during a public interview, and they are encouraged by their team of coaches to play up the romance angle to please the audience. It works. As violent as the game is, it is even more heartbreaking to see Peeta and Katniss's emotions manipulated for entertainment. Katniss is painfully aware throughout the games that she must not only survive but put on a good show. And is Peeta doing the same? Or does he really love her? And when the games are finally over, she realizes she can't continue to be the person she was in the arena yet she's unable to be who she was before.
Dystopian sci-fi often feels like cautionary tales, and there is a bit of that here, what with our thirst for 'reality' television, but I was too swept away by the horror of the games and the heartbreaking tale of Peeta and Katniss to tell if there were any fingers wagging at me.
Although you won't find The Hunger Games at the Marshall Lane Library, if you'd like to read something similar try The Giver, by Lois Lowry or The House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer, both of which can be found in the Marshall Lane Library.