I don't know -- I think Katniss did what felt right to her partly out of obligation, not necessarily because it was the only option open to her. (I'm talking about the very end there.)
I also think when you're working with a world with a certain population is starved and desperate, and children are made to fight to the death, what you need to transcend initially is death, and the death of your loved ones. Katniss didn't change the whole world, but she made a pretty big mark given what she was working with.
Amy,
I agree with you. I kind of feel like I didn't like Collins' writing to bring us to that point though.
Every single death in A Song of Ice and Fire:
[link]
beat me to it, Consuela. That is amazing.
In other (less deadly) books, I interviewed the author of A River of No Return about time travel and food today: [link]
This is interesting - some simple textual analysis of the
Hunger Games, Harry Potter,
and
Twilight
series, giving the most distinctive adjectives, adverbs, and sentences are. There's not much that's surprising, but I thought it funny what Suzanne Collins' most common adjective is.
I love Meyer's list of most common sentences.
I'll admit I skimmed -- did they level each author at all? Reading level, I mean? That would have been interesting to see.
One of the commenters took offense to the lumping in of these three books together. I actually agree with some of her points.
did they level each author at all? Reading level, I mean? That would have been interesting to see.
They didn't, but...
THG: 7
T: 4.4
HPatPS:5.3
I'm surprised Harry Potter isn't higher than that, based on the vocabulary.