Can I just say...I don't really understand the appeal of The Hunger Games? Almost everyone I know (aside from me and D) seems to be into it. I tried reading the first book twice (once from the library, once on my Kindle). I just don't get it. I think part of it is, I don't like violence, and especially violence concerning teenagers, hunger and death. The whole thing just seems in massively bad taste to me.

I finished reading Gossip, which I loved (except for an ending that seemed out of place, but that wasn't enough to mar my enjoyment), and started reading Some Assembly Required (Anne Lamott's nonfiction account of her 19-year-old son and his newborn). This can definitely go in the "brutally honest" category. I guess all her family members (and her son's girlfriend) are used to scathingly honest writing? Nonetheless, an interesting read.

Comments

I have a 30 yr. old and 27 yr. old.. they're into it... can u believe it?
I don't get what the big deal was about the Twilight series... Crappy writing.. My 30 yr. old couldn't even get thru the first 20 pages of the first book... I guess anything different will appeal to whoever...
Bearette said…
Yeah, i guess an original concept will grab people - i think in publishing they call it high-concept...

I only read the first Twilight book, the other ones i couldn't get into. i did like the movies. Hunger Games, i can't get into at all.
Rachel Federman said…
Hunger Games holds no appeal for me, Twilight only slightly (tho never read). I am curious as to what kind of plots really hold a reader's attention, tho these kinds rarely hold mine. The bad writing is just too distracting.

Lamott- so curious to hear more about your take on that book. I can't get over how brutally honest some people can be. If I even mention someone's name on my blog I feel like it pisses him/her off.
Rachel Federman said…
BTw, do you have to have that robot thing on the blog...just curious if you have to. I find it's a deterrent to commenting - I wonder if others do, too. (Or am I just lazy?)
Bearette said…
i'm going to try to get rid of that. i don't like it either.
Bearette said…
i can't figure out how to change it. if anyone knows how, feel free to pipe up...
Bearette said…
Yes, i'm surprised too (re the honesty). it is very easy to piss people off...
Go into Google profile... u can disarm it there.
Bearette said…
thanks, just tried, doesn't seem to work...
Bearette said…
Okay, finally found a settings tab that included word verification. It was really buried in there.
Rachel Federman said…
awesome!!!
Lisa said…
I hated "Twilight" but LOVE "The Hunger Games." Stayed up all night and made excuses to stay home the next day so I could read it. I thought it was one of the few YA dystopian novels that avoids the usual cliches, doesn't shy away from politics and the gray areas, and relegates romance to the background.

But to quote a famous librarian whose name I can't remember and am too lazy too look up: Each book, it's reader; each reader, his (or her) book.
judy in ky said…
i read the books at my preteen nieces' urging. I found the idea disturbing initially, but actually found the books interesting. I liked the first movie because of its stylistic novelty, but not sure I will like the second and third movies because they are so much darker.

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