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  1. 133 of 143 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Viva la revolution, 11 Oct 2011
    By 
    simon211175 (UK) –
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    This review is from: Catching Fire (Kindle Edition)

    Soon to be a major film series. Something I found out after reading the first one. I can see it being a good film, although reading up on that and the books more, it seems this series is less of a hit with the male population – on the premise that this book mentions romance.

    So, to clarify. I’m a man. I’m not young adult, and I’m not one for reading romance novels. The Twilight series are just wrong in my opinion.

    Now we’ve established that, I can hopefully persuade you that these books are not romance novels. Nor are they just for kids.

    This book picks up a few months after the close of the first (The Hunger Games). Peeta and Katniss are still playing up their romance for the Capitol crowds, and getting ready for their tour of the districts. But word is spreading of an uprising in the districts, and now President Snow is looking for blood.

    I won’t go in to more detail about the plot – you can read that in the product details above, and to be honest, if you’ve read the first book, and are already here – why haven’t you bought this yet?

    I’ve read some reviews saying this book isn’t as good as the first one. I disagree, partly. The plot, and the writing are as good, if not better than the first. It lets itself down slightly by The Games being not as involved as the first book – but then I don’t think they really are meant to be. They serve their purpose to get us to the start of book 3 (Mockingjay (Hunger Games)), and they do it well.

    If you have read the first book, you should read this right now. You’ll enjoy it, I promise. If you haven’t read the first book, you need to go do that before reading this one.

    I for one, am off to the third book.

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  2. 75 of 83 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Just as good as the first one, 12 July 2009

    So, the ‘Hunger Games’. What a blazing book that was; ‘Battle Royale’ meets ‘Big Brother’. But the first book only really got the story started. The main attraction of the book were the Games themselves, and only tantalising glimpses of the dystopian world were given.

    In Catching Fire, we delve deeper into the history and mystery of this futuristic world. We learn a a few things about how Panem came to be, but also many more questions are raised. Did you think things would become less complicated for Katniss and Peeta after the Games ended? Far from it. Everything becomes far more complicated, and events spiral beyond their control.

    The genuinely terrifying President Snow, a snakelike being who smells of blood and roses, is as threatening and hateful when he’s not present as when he is. He’s angry at our heroes, and getting angrier by the day as the unrest in the downtrodden districts grow. Katniss and Peeta are playing figurative chess with their lives as well as their loved ones. But there seems to be no escaping the power of Snow, and the revenge he brings crashing down upon them is horrific, devastating and, I will admit, completely unexpected.

    In fact, that’s the whole thing about ‘Catching Fire’, although the first ‘Hunger Games’ was an excellent book, it was a little predictable. This isn’t. Every chapter seems to end on a plot twist, and your breath will catch in your throat as you fear for what could happen next.

    On the downside, ‘Catching Fire’ is the second part of a trilogy, traditionally the weakest book in three because it neither has the advantage of starting the story nor finish it. Stories are followed up from where they left off, and some are started but not finished, obviously ready for the final installment, but ‘Catching Fire’ doesn’t feel like it’s own book. Plus, you could practically split this book in half, each half in very different places, with different stakes and different characters, and both almost completely inconsequential of each other, so it can feel a bit…tacked on at times. Plus ‘Catching Fire’ does sometimes retread familiar ground, making it feel a bit lazy here and there.

    But honestly, these are just nitpicks. If you liked the first book, as I did, then you’ll be just as delighted (and terrified) by this one. And, without spoiling anything, the last few chapters could be some of the finest, scariest, most heart-stopping moments I’ve ever read, and left me gagging for the final book.

    If ‘Hunger Games’ left you hungry for more, then ‘Catching Fire’ will set you ablaze. Essential reading, for young adults and adults too. Not for the faint-hearted!

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  3. 52 of 59 people found the following review helpful
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Still entertaining, but not as good as the first book., 19 May 2011
    By 
    A. Whitehead “Werthead” (Colchester, Essex United Kingdom) –
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    Having survived the Hunger Games, Katniss Everdeen is back home in Sector 12, not looking forward to her role as a mentor for the next year’s games. She is surprised to hear rumours that her defiance of the Capitol and President Snow during the Games has sparked unrest and even discord in other sectors. When she and her co-winner, Peeta, conduct a tour of the districts, Katniss realises that her name and her emblem, the mockingjay, are being taken up as a symbol of rebellion and hope.

    Determined to crush Katniss’s influence, Snow arranges a special new Hunger Games event for the 75th anniversary of the games. All the living winners of the games must return to the arena for a fresh battle…

    Catching Fire is the second volume of The Hunger Games Trilogy, Suzanne Collins’ highly successful, post-apocalypse, dystopian YA SF series. Collins never intended to write a trilogy, so Catching Fire has some work to do to set up a bigger storyline that will be resolved in the following novel, namely the move from merely being a story set in a dystopia to a more epic story about the overthrow of the oppressive government.

    For these reasons Catching Fire has some issues. We’re more than halfway through the novel before the second Hunger Games kick off, and we’re not able to spend much time with those games before the conclusion arrives. This is a shame as Collins addresses some of the weaknesses of the first set of games, with many more contestants being identified and much better-characterised than first time around. The arena is also far more ingenious, with many more deadly traps. The games section of the novel and the conclusion are both rushed in an attempt to cover as much ground as possible before the final novel, which hurts the quality of this book.

    That said, it’s still a fast-paced, readable and enjoyable book. We see more of Panem and get more of a sense what life is like for people living there, which is essential to better-establish the wider backdrop of the series. On the characterisation front, Katniss isn’t always a sympathetic protagonist and often makes mistakes, which makes her more relatable and real. Other characters, like Peeta and newcomers like Finnick, are also given some solid scenes and character-building moments. The mutual hatred and anger between Katniss and President Snow is also well-handled. However, the Capitol and its rulers are rather dense in this book. Everything they do seems designed to inflame the situation and further the rebellion, which is weird for people who’ve been in charge for a century and have used the Hunger Games as a form of propaganda and control for seventy-five years, which requires some savvy knowledge of media and PR. Instead, the plot feels set-up ahead of time and both the reader and the characters are along for the ride.

    Catching Fire (***½) is a drop down in quality from The Hunger Games, but still an enjoyable and entertaining novel. It is available now in the UK and USA.

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