Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Week 13

The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins
      
As I've been following this book each page I read keeps me flipping to the next one.  Suzanne Collins really does a wonderful job of incorporating personality in each of the characters.  At some points the anger and temper Katniss has can relate to each of us.  We all act or say something we know inside we should not have mentioned when we’re angered.  It really puts you in their shoes with the worry of what the harsh consequences could be.  Katniss and Peeta are the all-time underdogs of the games from the poorest district in Panem, yet starting with the ceremonies at the captiol they seemed to attract the most attention.  Giving the tributes that spent their whole life training to win all the more reason to take them out first. 
Also it keeps you guessing on who can really be trusted and who can not.  Katniss wants to trust Peeta and remain rebellious allies, but all the while she thinks it could be just some secret strategy he has.  To kill her with kindness is how she puts it, the one thing that can come between her life and death she’s always unsure.  Following their orders they appear to have some feelings for each other for the cameras, although deep down I believe they both feel something between them.  It is a reality show love story lie to the country, its this that’s going to keep them alive whether they have to kill each other in the end.

Matt Eades
 

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Hunger Games

The Hunger Games – Suzanne Collins
Explain the significance of the title. (Authors do not choose a title randomly. Usually the title is symbolic in some way.)
The Hunger Games, a simple title for the book, yet it holds so much.  It expresses not only the main theme and event in the story, but captures the emotions of the characters.  The Hunger Games is the fear for some throughout the year, for some it’s a chance to escape.  The game is twenty four contestants who have to kill each other.  Last man or woman standing wins.  Many families enter their names multiply times for supplies to survive.  Each character’s life revolves around this, tearing families apart and reminding them of their decisions of the past.
You could almost just call this book Gladiator, as it resembles so much of the Roman times.  Something so evil created for entertainment for the hierarchy.  Some children train their young lives to win this event. Although with random choosing, children with no such training or experience can be picked.  Also the range of ages is bizarre.  Within the contestants can be full grown adults and children who can barely make their own meal.
The name does not just express a book, but an exciting adventure by every turn of the page.  
Matt Eades

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Week 7

The Hate List – Jennifer Brown
Free Choice Response
             I feel as if Valerie is lost in a world by herself.  No matter how many people reach out to help it is hard for her to believe.  It’s almost as she sees it in her eyes that the world is against her.  She likes to hide her feelings and emotions, never expressing the real thoughts that flow through her mind.
             Life does change and I believe that Val just needs to be accepting in the kindness of other people.  It seems the only person besides Dr. Heiler that she can really spill her thoughts to is the wall paper above her bed. 
             Point trying to be proved here is that Valerie, like so many people that walk through the halls here, just needs to hold their hand out with an open mind. 

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Guided Response - Week 6

The Hate List – Jennifer Brown
Identify what caused a major change in the main character and explain how the character(s) changed. (These changes may have been a consequence of choice or conflict. They might be a display of some outstanding character trait or a result of events that occurred during the novel.)

      I believe the whole book is about Valerie going through different changes.  Dealing with the shooting, losing the one person she loved, becoming a social outcast, the way of her parents, and so on.  After the shooting Valerie experiences several changes with her life and everyone else.  Now that Nick is gone she is dealing with the change of not having somebody there anymore.  When she was questioned by the detective, even her outlook on the situation changed.  Not only did she realize how guilty she looked, but I think she learns that the way she saw Nick and the list were different than how he interpreted them.  Instead of having parents who were mad and fighting, the shooting brought them together temporarily.
                Another change is the way that she sees her peers act, which I believe will ultimately sink in on Valerie too.  They have learned to accept one another as an individual, and let things flow their own way.  High school in general is usually not what you would call peaceful and supportive, more dramatic and ridiculous. So having a school of teenagers come together is what you call change, but with an incident like that who couldn’t change?    
Eades

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The Hate List

After starting this novel, I like how the book attracts readers with its introdcution.  It gives you a chance to think about being in the same spot they are describing.  Reading one page makes me want to read the next, then the one after that and so on.School shootings are something we all grrew up learning about and hearing about incidents.