brendaclay's review

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3.0

A collection of essays about The Hunger Games from very different perspectives. My favorite by far was "Your Heart Is a Weapon The Size of Your Fist." :)

melsocool's review

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4.0

A great group of essays that bring up some powerful themes in the Hunger Games Trilogy.

meredith_w's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

esher14's review

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4.0

I was a HUGE fan of the Hunger Games (Who isn't?), so i thought I would give this book a try. It helped me think about the book a little differently, specifically giving me more insight on the politics and behing-the-scenes types of things I never really thought of (or cared about) before. Yes, there are some boring essays in this book (I apologize to those writers), but I fought through it, and overall, I'm glad I did.

winterbee's review

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4.0

Initially, I didn't want to give this book so many stars, but in the end it made me realize (again) how important The Hunger Games trilogy really was and what it taught its readers and it made me tear up, so I guess I really liked it and if you're a fan of the Hunger Games, you should read it too.

dlsmall's review

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3.0

I've read the Smart Pop takes on Battlestar and Serenity/Firefly and really liked them. This was one was fine, maybe not as deep, which may be intentional as it is part of the newer "Smart Pop YA" imprint. I did like Ned Vizzini's essay on Katniss's (and his own) media training and the nature of fame. Also insightful was Blythe Woolston's analysis of the impact of PTSD on the surviving tributes.

I did just notice that Smart Pop has a title addressing Alias and forthcoming volumes on Friday Night Lights and Fringe...exciting!!!

chrstnareads's review

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3.0

If you're a rabid fan of The Hunger Games you'll most likely find the essays collected within to be insightful, making you think more deeply about the Girl Who Was On Fire and her companions.

The esays at the beginning about the actual text were good. As it went on, though, some of the essays were hit or miss. There was one about fashion that I found fairly boring, but the one about PTSD was really good. One essay about media and war seemed more like the author just wanted to talk about how she's been oh-so-put-upon by the nay-sayers of the world, and I often forgot that I was reading a book about The Hunger Games and not a book about whether or not the War on Terror is/was justified. I ended up skimming most of that pity party.

BUT this is definitely woth the read if only for the literary essays. Those set the girl on fire again and make it worth it.

**Originally posted to BN.com through my Nook**

kittylynn's review against another edition

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Lack of time

julibug86's review against another edition

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2.0

I was so incredibly excited about this, but ended up finding it a little dry and repetitive. Literary criticism can get tedious (college taught me that), but usually excites me if it's about a book I enjoyed. Like a one-on-one book club. The problem with this that it was by other young adult, fiction authors - none that I've ever read. And they tended to repeat what the others were saying and none of it was terribly well written or insightful. The authors take on a very casual tone, one I don't find appropriate for criticism, even if it is of a YA book. All in all, a disappointing read that I struggled to finish.

absalomabsalom's review

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The first theory i ever read... Plus i remember i was watching it illegally under the covers w/ a hand flashlight... i also just remembered that said flashlight only stayed on via button being continuously pressed... so there were nights where i would weigh the choice: in order to read without removal of said book from room by mother coming in from seeing overhead light through door - to read with child (plus sub-average child thumb size, at that) thumb bent and thus physically discomforted by continuous press of button, or to accept defeat, and lay in the darkness, bookless, until pushed into sleep by sheer animal boredom?