Posted 21 April 2012 - 08:20 PM
I really liked them. The first was excellent, a lot better than the 2nd and 3rd, but I still liked them. I think you can tell that their was a lot more inspiration behind the 1st one, whereas the 2nd and 3rd kind of exist because the 1st was so popular and fans wanted to know what happened to Katniss and Peeta and the evil Capitol.
Whenever I pick up a novel, I read it for the story, not the elegance of the prose or something like that. I'm looking for a story that's exciting and captivating, and so long as the writing is not so bad that it takes away from the story, I'm fine with it. (For context, some examples of things I did find the writing to be so poor I couldn't enjoy the novel: Dan Brown books, and John Grisham books. In both cases, I saw the films before I read the books, and enjoyed the movies. The writing, on the other hand, was so bad that it ruined what were overall fun plotlines). I thought the Hunger Games was reasonably well written. Yes, the prose is simple, but it's young adult fiction, and it wasn't terrible or riddled with unrealistic dialogue (well, aside perhaps from some of the sappy love triangle moments). Story trumps elegance of writing to me.
Apparently some people are really bothered by small inconsistencies, which isn't something that bothers me. Yes, the magical bow that can shoot down space ships is a little silly. Still, it was one scene and didn't really detract from the overall story. It's not like the whole plot revolved around teenager's abilities to shoot down planes with a bow. Same goes for the potential logistical difficulties of the districts and the settings. I feel like world building requires you to either go all in, or live with some incosistencies. Yes, perhaps Collins could have stretched this into 5 1,000 page books and properly built up a working economy for Panem and the districts, with realistic population figures and geographic sizes. Instead, she asked the readers to just go with it and assume everything works out, and things aren't so unrealistic that I find it difficult to do so.
The one thing that was a detractor was the silly love triangle, but I think that has to be excused too. I think when Collins was writing this, her target audience was clearly teenage girls. I doubt she foresaw this becoming popular across a wide range of demographics, so the silly triangle that only a teenage girl could enjoy or find remotely compelling was meant for a different audience, not for me. For the most part, it wasn't too prevalent. I could pass over the random paragraphs interspersed throughout the books where the characters would get mad and jealous over some petty slight.
Anyway, to end my rambling, probably incoherent post. If you want a fun, exciting page turner this is a good one. If you're looking for a literary masterpiece, you're going to be disappointed, although considering this is YA fiction, I'm not sure that's a realistic expectation.