Hunger Games Blog Post 3
Hey. Here we are
again my third and final post. This is gonna be a great post where I try to get
even more descriptive with my post. Then I will talk about the theme of the
book and what the author is trying to convey, I will draw a symbol for a
character and explain what the heck a symbol has to do with a character from
the hunger games, and lastly I will tell you guys how I would convince a
librarian to put this book in a library.
I’m just going
to reiterate what I said before because there isn’t much else to say about the
book for the most part but anyways. “The Hunger Games” is about a girl and a
boy whom defy all odds. They survived the Hunger Games and also the government hasn’t
killed them yet. I feel like the president is not happy and it will not take
long for him to kill one or both of them probably “on accident.”
In this book I
feel like the author is trying to convey that the government is starting to get
to controlling. I think Suzanne is trying to give us an example of what really
could happen if the government gains too much control. She is trying to convey
that if one day this does happen or something similar happens in the future,
there will always be that one person that wants to not conform to the rules or that
wants to break free somehow but subliminally blackmailing the government.
If I were to draw
a symbol for this book it would probably be a girl and boy running while
holding hands with fires in the background. I would want this to be my symbol
because it relates to the book and the characters in so many ways. The boy and
the girl represent the boys and girls from each district, but mostly Peeta and
Katniss. The holding hands represents the trust between each other and also the
disobedience towards the capital. Lastly the fire in the background represents
the danger involved the games and how the tributes are always trying to get
away from the danger to stay alive the longest.
This book is a
great book and I’m sure it has many awards. If I asked my librarian to put this
book in the library and she questioned it for some reason I would explain the
book to her. I would tell her hat this book explains a lot and can be read from
any age group in Timber Creek. I would tell her that this book is great because
it explains the possibilities of what could possibly happen if North America
was run instead by a totalitarian government. I feel like the librarian would
like this book and want to put it in her library because it is also a very
popular book and a lot of people read it. Also the book probably got a lot of
awards already.
Okay well thanks
for watching my blog. Come back and visit next time I post because I know you
must love reading these, whoever you are about. All I know is that there's about
60-100 of you so keep on coming back? Bye.
I like how you talk about how you more descriptive than your other blogs about the theme. I can also see how that symbol relates to a character of the hunger games I also thought that symbol appears in mortal kombat and relates in a similar way.
ReplyDeletei thought the same thing when reading this book. how its about the government when it gains too much power and control eveything. i think its already happening. but i like how you described the theme with a picture and how well it relates to the book.
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