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It’s been eighteen years since Suzanne Collins wrote “The Hunger Games”, the smash hit literary sensation that continues to feel relevant and capture the attention of readers. This ongoing series will be a review series of both the Suzanne Collins books, as well as the film adaptations of the novels. I will post my review on the last Thursday of the month as we revisit the totalitarian world of Panem and the hope of the Mockingjay.

Book: “Catching Fire” by Suzanne Collins
Publishing Info: Scholastic Press, September 2009
Where Did I Get This Book: I own it
Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound
Book Description: Sparks are igniting. Flames are spreading. And the Capitol wants revenge.
Against all odds, Katniss Everdeen has won the Hunger Games. She and fellow District 12 tribute Peeta Mellark are miraculously still alive. Katniss should be relieved, happy even. After all, she has returned to her family and her longtime friend, Gale. Yet nothing is the way Katniss wishes it to be. Gale holds her at an icy distance. Peeta has turned his back on her completely. And there are whispers of a rebellion against the Capitol—a rebellion that Katniss and Peeta may have helped create.
Much to her shock, Katniss has fueled an unrest that she’s afraid she cannot stop. And what scares her even more is that she’s not entirely convinced she should try. As time draws near for Katniss and Peeta to visit the districts on the Capitol’s cruel Victory Tour, the stakes are higher than ever. If they can’t prove, without a shadow of a doubt, that they are lost in their love for each other, the consequences will be horrifying.
In Catching Fire, the second novel of the Hunger Games trilogy, Suzanne Collins continues the story of Katniss Everdeen, testing her more than ever before . . . and surprising readers at every turn.
Review: I mentioned before that this is a part re-read/re-watch, part initial read, as while I read “The Hunger Games” proper (as well as “Songbirds” and “Reaping”) and have seen all of the movies, I didn’t read “Catching Fire” or “Mockingjay” because I was told that they weren’t as good as the first book. I don’t know who told me that, thinking back. It wasn’t my husband, who has read ALL of the books (and dove into the series the moment we got back from the first movie), but whoever it was is on notice because while I was reading “Catching Fire” I muttered to myself ‘okay, this is really good, who lied to me?!’

I think that what I really liked about this book (and I liked it about the movie version too so why oh WHY couldn’t I have used my brain to realize the book was probably also good!?) is that we get to not only get some expanded lore about Panem and the aftermath of ‘winning’ The Hunger Games, we also see the folly of trying to appease a fascist, and the way that revolutions can slowly gain momentum because of fates aligning in just the right way (I will undoubtedly talk more about this when I eventually review “Sunrise on the Reaping”). Katniss and her Night Lock rebellion at the end of hers and Peeta’s games has enamored her with the citizens of the Capitol, but President Snow sees this moment not as two lovers willing to die for each other, but a direct threat to his power because of how it showed that, in fact, he cannot control the district citizens, and therein cannot control Panem. Since this is a first person perspective and it’s all through Katniss’s eyes we don’t REALLY get to see the way that the uprisings are starting, outside of hints here and there, but as she goes on her Victory Tour and more people connect with her, she becomes more desperate to appease Snow to keep her loved ones safe. She is not in control any more than he is, and it made for such a fascinating trajectory for her.
I also liked spending more time in District Twelve and getting more insight into what her mother and sister Prim have been doing (healers!), and seeing how Katniss and Peeta are heroes but nothing really changes for their community outside of having bragging rights (and honestly, how it just gets worse as Snow gets more desperate and more brutal Peacekeepers are sent into the District and wreak more havoc). And while I don’t like Gale, I do like seeing a bit more of him and his perspective as a non Victor who has to play his own part by nature of being Katniss’s friend (and the first glimmers of radicalization that are being set in motion even more so). By the time things are starting to get out of control and Snow and Katniss both realize she can’t stop it, her death is going to be the only recourse, and therefore the Quarter Quell happens and Victors from all over are pulled into it as a huge ruse to take her out. And probably send a message that none of them better get any ideas. You cannot appease fascists, and that is a clear theme in this novel (as all of Collins’s novels have themes).
And the Games this time around are brutal. I mean, they are always brutal, but we add in a layer of the absolute unfairness of all of these victors being brought back to fight again in spite of the trauma they have already endured and the promise that they could be left alone after their initial win. Katniss doesn’t know who she can trust in the arena, knowing that she has made SOME alliances, or has been thrown into others, and the suspense of having to be in another fight to the death while thinking maybe she CAN trust some of the players (but maybe not?) just adds to the suspense, especially since we are seeing it all through her eyes. This also is the book that we meet one of my other absolute favorite “Hunger Games” characters, Johanna Mason, and having only seen her on screen until this point it was VERY gratifying seeing her on the page. Because she manages to be even MORE bitchy here, and seeing her be a terror was a lot of fun. At the same time, however, I feel like it was almost more interesting leading up to the games, as while this is still pulse pounding and a great dystopian thriller, I don’t think that it could top those initial games because it was so novel in the initial book, even with the added suspense about the other tributes and their motivations.
And the cliffhanger packs a wallop too. Poor Katniss. She tried to hard to keep her loved ones safe and then her whole community gets blown off the map in retaliation. Snow being on the page more this time made it all the more cruel, I think, because she tried her best but it was never going to be good enough. That’s one of the ultimate tragedies of this series that I will probably keep harping on as my reading and viewing goes on: she never wanted this. And even when she grudgingly accepts it, and even if it is for the greater good of Panem, she’s just a kid, and it’s such a weight to carry.
“Catching Fire” was another great read in this series. I’m kicking myself for having left it by the wayside all those years ago. Up next is “Mockingjay”, the one I was told by many was the most boring. But after reading this one and finding it better than I was told, I’m thinking that I will probably be taken aback by how deceived I was with that one too. I guess we’ll see!
Rating 8: We get more into the intrigue of a fomenting revolution seen through the eyes of someone who never meant to start it, as well as more insight into a totalitarian society. Throw in another brutal games and “Catching Fire” is another harrowing read, and I’m glad I finally picked it up!
Reader’s Advisory:
“Catching Fire” is included on the Goodreads lists “Best Young Adult Dystopian Novels”, and “Best Survival Stories”.













