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Mockingjay (Hunger Games Trilogy)
 
 

Mockingjay (Hunger Games Trilogy) [Kindle Edition]

Suzanne Collins
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (320 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

Can Katniss Everdeen win the final fight against the Capitol? Against all odds, she's survived the Hunger Games twice. But now that she's made it out of the bloody arena alive, she is still not safe. The Capitol is angry. The Capitol wants revenge. Who do they think should pay for the unrest? Katniss. And what's worse, President Snow has made it clear that no-one else is safe either. Not Katniss's family, not her friends, not the people of District 12... Find out what the Mockingjay really stands for in the third book of the nerve-shredding, adrenaline-soaked _Hunger Games_ trilogy, whose first episode triumphed in the arena to win the Red House Children's Book Award 2010! "Bare-knuckle adventure of the best kind." _The Times_ "The Hunger Games is amazing." _Stephenie Meyer_ "I couldn't stop reading." _Stephen King_

About the Author

Suzanne Collins is the author of the New York Times bestselling Underland Chronicles series, which has more than one million books in print and is available in seven foreign editions. In the award-winning The Hunger Games and Catching Fire, Collins continues to explore the effects of war and violence on those coming of age. The much-anticipated finale to The Hunger Games trilogy, Mockingjay, will be published on August 24th, 2010. Also a successful writer for children's television, Collins lives with her family in Connecticut. Visit her at www.suzannecollinsbooks.com.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I loved the first book, it was literally unputdownable for me and I read it over one weekend. The second book, not so much, but I still got through it pretty quick and hoped it would all come together for this final part of the trilogy. Sadly this was not to be the case. Some of the main disappointments of 'Mockingjay' for me (SPOILER ALERT):

1) The pace of the book is very slow- in the beginning we are told about the drab district 13 routines and what they get up to on a day to day basis. After the very fast paced ending to part two, I was expecting this book to take off from where the last book left off, however it takes a VERY long while before any real action kicks in. I was actually bored for the first half of the book!

2) The fact that Katniss is either drugged up/hiding away from any real action/recovering from some injury or another for a lot of the book does not help the pace. In fact it removes the reader from a lot of the action and the storyline... and whats the point of writing the book then if the reader is not invited or able to become a part of the story?

3) The final part of the war where the parachutes fall and Prim dies, a momentum had been built that should have ended with Katniss reaching and confronting President Snow. It was hugely disappointing that that face off/confrontation was not included at that point. Instead, yet again, she is knocked out and we are excluded from the action to find her in a hospital bed, yet again recovering.

4) Katniss character lacks the resolve/determination/decision making skills that she showed in the first book. Instead she dithers,hides and tries to run away as much as possible. This made her rather unlikeable to me and not a realistic candidate for being the main face for the rebels. It shows the writer lacked consistency in her writing of this character.

5) The careless dismissal or deaths of main characters is unfair on the reader who has gotten to know these characters over three books. To have Prim and Finnick so quickly and carelessly dismissed was very unfair to the reader and for Gale to just disappear like that without any explanation just really baffled me. What was Collins thinking?

I just really wish this part had been done differently as I did enjoy the first two books. But, alas, that was not to be the case!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By TeensReadToo TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
It's over. The trilogy is finished. There will now need to be a new series that will have people waiting impatiently from year to year for the next installment. *Sigh*

MOCKINGJAY begins with Katniss shuffling through the ashy remains of District 12. Having survived her second Hunger Games, she has recovered enough from her injuries to visit the little that is left of her former home. Her concussion-ravaged brain is still trying to make sense of all that has happened.

When she is returned to the safety of District 13, Katniss must be gradually reintroduced to those from District 12 who survived, and she must find her place in her new surroundings. Her mother and Prim are busy every day caring for patients in the hospital, and Gale continues his recovery and slowly begins to work for the rebel cause in District 13. Katniss fills her days ignoring her district required schedule as she wanders from one isolated hiding place to the next.

It doesn't take long for 13's leaders to make it clear that they plan to be the ones to lead the rebels to victory against the Capitol and President Snow. Katniss is once more expected to be the symbol for that victory. She knows their goal is to make her the Mockingjay, but she hesitates to step forward immediately. Does she want the responsibility? Is she ready for what will most likely be her final living act?

When Katniss finally accepts the role of Mockingjay, she does so with stipulations, two of which are that Peeta and the other Hunger Games survivors must be rescued and she must be the one to end the life of President Snow. Her demands are met and the preparations begin. What follows is non-stop action filled with violence, torture, attacks, and destruction.

After reading THE HUNGER GAMES and CATCHING FIRE, I should have guessed that author Suzanne Collins would not make things easy for Katniss and her friends. She filled this last book with twists and turns as well as her usual direct, "in your face" moments that had me gasping through the first two books. Without including any spoilers, I'll say I found the ending acceptable and on-course with what I expected from both Collins and her characters. This is definitely a series that will be enjoyed by readers for years to come.

Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
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29 of 33 people found the following review helpful
By A. Whitehead TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
The districts are rebelling against the Capitol, united by the symbol of the Mockingjay. Katniss Everdeen, the symbol of the rebellion, is now living in the secretive District 13 where she finds that she is to be used as a figurehead to bring President Snow down. However, Katniss is unhappy with the demands being put on her, and also with the fate of Peeta, now a prisoner of the Capitol. As two sides prepare for a final confrontation, Katniss has to ask if her new allies are no better than the enemy they seek to destroy.

Mockingjay brings the Hunger Games Trilogy to a suitably bloody and epic conclusion. Though it has to be said it's also a somewhat rushed and predictable conclusion.

As mentioned in my review of Catching Fire, Collins wasn't planning for this to be a series, so had to scramble quickly in the second book to lay out a larger and more epic story. Whilst laudable, this effort was flawed because the story wasn't originally set up that way, and so many new characters and concepts had to be introduced in Book 2 that the actual plot of the book, Katniss fighting in a second Hunger Games, was fairly rushed. That problem extends into Book 3. Whilst the possibility of District 13 was first voiced in Book 2, we don't see it until Mockingjay. This means that in the space of a 430-page, large-typeface novel, Collins has to set up a whole new faction with its own cast of characters, ideology and goals, then bring in the existing cast and have them interact, then have them unite for the final assault on the Capitol, and then examine the issues raised by these storylines.

Collins does a credible job, but it's clearly not ideal. If the series had been planned as a trilogy from the start, District 13 and its dubious rulers could have been introduced and established earlier. Katniss's relationship with them and her lack of respect for authority, even an authority trying to achieve her long-term goal of destroying President Snow's regime, makes for a solid storyline, but it is under-explored here. In fact, the book is so packed that lots of elements are under-explored, and characterisation suffers. In particular, Finnick lacks the flair and fire he showed in the previous novel that made an interesting character, whilst Peeta comes across badly. Katniss continues to be a more complex heroine than expected, but most of the other characters suffer (and Coin, the head of District 13, is a bit of a two-dimensional figure at best).

On the plus side, the rapid pace means that the book is certainly action-packed, and Collins has some ingenuity in coming up with more weapons for the Capitol to deploy against the rebels. There's also a nice contrast between the deadly serious final attack on the Capitol and the Hunger Games of the previous two novels. This is also a harsher novel: Collins is pretty ruthless with some characters and it's definitely a bloodier book where Katniss has to do some more morally questionable things that in prior novels, which raises the stakes and the tension in the ramp-up to the finale.

Mockingjay (***½) is a readable conclusion to the series, though the rushed pace hurts some aspects of it. However, the series is brought to a solid-enough conclusion, if a reasonably predictable one. The book is available now in the UK and USA.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Sorry Suzanne :(
Usually when I write a review, I be positive and shout at the people who write negative reviews. Sadly, as of today I have joined them. Read more
Published 9 hours ago by Kieran McKeating
mattandjo
Read the first, ordered the 2nd and 3rd. All three are gripping and couldn't stop reading until have finished! It's brilliant and I highly recommend.
Published 11 hours ago by mattandjo
I lost myself in these books...
I first picked up the Hunger Games only a week ago, and had read it by the end of the evening. I was backed on Amazon and ordered the other two components of the trilogy. Read more
Published 16 hours ago by Amy
HUNGER GAMES REVIEW - BRILLIANT
I loved this book - i read it in one day - couldn't put it down. Absolutely brilliant fo all ages
Published 18 hours ago by Ginge
GOOD/SHAME
the book is undeniably well written but a bit slow.i was so happy peeta and katniss have a future but i think that gale shold've had a mention in the epilouge. Read more
Published 3 days ago by Ms. Janine J. Kay
Very dissappointed.
Once again I am disappointed with the ending of a book. What's the matter with these people? It's like they got bored of writting their own book! Read more
Published 3 days ago by nadine
I loved this book!!!
I laughed and cried from start to finish!! one of the best books ive ever read if not THE best!!! simply fantastic... :)
Published 4 days ago by bookworm1
The other reviewers are wrong: the ending is great!
The hunger games trilogy is excellent, and Mockingjay, although different to the first two books, is likewise expertly written, has a good story and is finished off nicely. Read more
Published 5 days ago by Joel D. B. Langton
A good end to the series.
Alert! Alert! Alert! There may be spoilers in this review for all three of The Hunger Games books. DO NOT read this if you don't want to be spoiled!! Read more
Published 6 days ago by Stacey Mitchell
Sloppy and disappointing
I found this the least gripping of the trilogy - at one point I was going to give up, but I persisted and it did pick up a bit. Read more
Published 6 days ago by DP
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