The Hunger Games is
the first book in the series and was released on September 14, 2008.
The Hunger Games follows
16-year-old Katniss Everdeen, a girl from District 12 who volunteers for the
74th Hunger Games in place of her younger sister Primrose Everdeen. Also
selected from District 12 is Peeta Mellark, who once saved Katniss from
starvation when they were children. They are mentored by their district's only
living victor, Haymitch Abernathy, who won 24 years earlier and has since
led a solitary life of alcoholism.
Peeta confesses his longtime
secret love for Katniss in a televised interview prior to the Games. This
revelation stuns Katniss, who usually does not allow herself to think of
romantic attraction due to her traumatic childhood and her fear of losing
future children to the Hunger Games. However, she believes that Peeta is only
feigning love for her as a tactic for the Games.
In the arena, Peeta saves
Katniss’s life multiple times without her realizing. Katniss allies with Rue,
a young tribute from District 11 who reminds Katniss of her sister. When Rue is
killed, Katniss places flowers around her body as an act of defiance toward the
Capitol. The remaining tributes are alerted to a rule change allowing tributes
from the same district to win as a team. Katniss finds a seriously wounded
Peeta, and, rather than compete alone and be unencumbered by him, she risks her
life and nurses him back to health. Haymitch advises her to feign feelings for
Peeta in order to gain wealthy sponsors who can provide crucial supplies to the
"star-crossed lovers" during the Games. As she allows herself to get
close to Peeta, she develops real feelings for him.
When all of the other tributes
are dead, the rule change is abruptly revoked. With neither willing to kill the
other, Katniss comes up with a solution: a double suicide by eating poisonous
berries. This forces the authorities to concede that they have both won the
Games, just in time to save their lives. During and after the Games, Katniss’s
genuine feelings for Peeta grow, and she struggles to reconcile them with the
fact that their relationship developed under duress.
Haymitch warns her that the
danger is far from over. The authorities are furious at being made fools, and
the only way to try to allay their anger is to continue to pretend that her
actions were because of her love for Peeta and nothing else. On the journey
home, Peeta is dismayed to learn of the deception.

.jpg)

0 comments:
Post a Comment