


🔥 Unlock the revolution in your hands with Mockingjay! 📚
Scholastic Mockingjay is the thrilling final installment of Suzanne Collins' bestselling trilogy, featuring 448 pages of compelling narrative in a convenient paperback format. Highly rated by over 8,700 readers and ranked among the top books in multiple categories, it offers fast, free shipping and easy returns, making it a must-have for young adult and political fiction enthusiasts.
| ASIN | 1407132105 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,552 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #5 in Elections & Political Process #5 in History Reference Material for Young Adults #9 in Books on Death for Young Adults |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (8,744) |
| Dimensions | 13.2 x 2.9 x 19.8 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 9781407132105 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1407132105 |
| Item weight | 1.05 Kilograms |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 457 pages |
| Publication date | 1 December 2011 |
| Publisher | Scholastic |
| Reading age | 11 - 16 years |
U**K
pages falling out!
the moment i opened up the book to start reading the pages starting falling off after turning them only once or twice!!
K**T
This is the third, and final, book in The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins. If you read the first two books, you will read this one. All I can say is to be prepared for one heck of a ride. A lot happens in this book and Collins doesn't hold off on killing off a lot of people. The book starts where Catching Fire left off. Katniss is in District 13 with Gale, her mom, and her sister Prim. The Rebel group based in District 13 is trying to get Katniss to take up the Mockingjay symbol and become the face of their revolution. Katniss is unsure if she wants to go this route or not. Peeta is still missing and presumed captured by President Snow and being held in the Capital. Katniss's journey eventually leads to the capital itself and a final face-off with President Snow. This is a hard book to review without spoilers but I will give it my best shot. The pace of this book is relentless. Collins does not pull punches when it comes to killing off large groups of people, as well as people we love and care about. This is a dark book, and that is putting it mildly. As far as characterization goes we begin to see even more of what defines Katniss as a character; she is not sentimental, she is a survivor foremost and that it what sets her apart from others. A lot of the decisions made by Katniss in this book are driven by that personality trait. In fact at one point Gale and Peeta are discussing Katniss and who she will "choose". Gale sums it up perfectly when he says something to the effect of "Katniss will choose whoever she can't survive without." On to other characters. The ruthlessness we saw in Gale at the end of the Catching Fire is built upon in this book. Gale is ruthless and practical to the point of dislike at times. He begins to look like a character that likes what Katniss stands for, rather than who she is. At the end of book two I was Team Gale all the way. I thought that Gale and Katniss had more in common in survival instincts and could pull off a good relationship based on those characteristics. As this book starts and continues, we see a side of Gale that is more ruthless and dispassionate than ever before. In order to avoid spoilers I won't say much about Peeta, except that he is back in the story for the second half of the book. Collins does an excellent job at showing both sides of the story. You get to see both the good the rebel forces do, and the harm they cause in rebelling against the Capital. As Katniss and team enter the capital, Collins relates the Capital takeover as yet another type of dome just like previous "Hunger Games" this is an interesting idea and ties the three novels together well. In each of them we see our teams of characters struggling to stay alive, doing things no one should have to do. In each book there are brutal deaths. There's quite the twist at the end of this book. People may be surprised at who Katniss kills. All I have to say about this is that I was satisfied with the choice Katniss made, and had actually been hoping that Collins would have it play out that way. Katniss's actions at the end seemed like the best way to follow Katniss's beliefs, while trying to ensure the best ending for humanity as a whole. The epilogue was interesting. It was kind of nice to get a definitive ending to everything that played out before. It wrapped things up nicely. Still, I didn't think the epilogue was necessary and I think the book would have actually been a bit better and more thought-provoking without it. As with the previous books the writing style of this book was incredibly readable and engaging; no matter people think of the plot, you have to admit Collins is one heck of a great writer. Overall I thought this was an excellent conclusion to the series. Readers may not like how some of things play-out; but I thought they played out realistically and I liked the decisions Katniss made at the end...I thought her decisions really stayed true to the core personality trait of her character, which was to survive. I am eagerly awaiting whatever Collins comes up with next.
C**N
Esta serie de Hunger Games atrapó a mi adolescente, muy recomendable para que tengan el hábito de la lectura.
H**Z
The first two books of this trilogy: The Hunger Games and Catching Fire have both been exceptionally written and both had an excellent, exciting execution. I would highly recommend both of them to anyone. Although I given this book a 5 star rating, I believe there are a few 'kinks' with this book that have not been experienced with the two previous ones. Firstly, the novel starts off to be quite slow, boring and generally uninteresting leaving the reader somewhat demoralised and therefore hoping for more in the rest of the book, which sadly does not come up to expectations. However, as I have said the expectations are very high due to the lacking introduction. Personally, I found the introduction repetitive but according to physologists, the way in which Katniss continually behaves is normal, therefore showing that this book is actually slightly factual. Eventually, after the boredom of the start of the book, we begin to see more action unfold. From here, the book is superbly and masterfully written. The teams of 'Team Gale' and 'Team Peeta', which originates from the Twilight series, is constantly in war within this book as you would expect, however to me, this becomes tedious as Collins continues to make Katniss constantly swapping between the two. ***SPOILERS ALERT*** Eventually, Katniss chooses Peeta even after his ordeal with the Capitol. However, she is displayed as not loving him or the children they bear. To me this is ridiculous, a story's plot is followed by the main character - the plot is over throwing the Capitol and regaining power to oneselves and allowing oneself to make decisions about oneself and not having the Capitol make the decisions. Of course, the Capitol does fall but Katniss does not gain her independency but rather continues to allow herself be controlled by people around her. Example: President Snow manipulates her and controls her to kill the President of District 13. This is not right! She should gain some independence and make her own decisions, she should come out of the war and heal but she does not. Is Collins writing a political book about the effects of war or is this a young adults book where the character should not be so close to reality? ***SPOILERS ENDED*** The book is exceptionally moving in parts and can bring some to tears, however when you question why Collins did something, the answer is: "To hurt Katniss more". We see many deaths, however many of these are anonomous, for we do not know who most of the people who are dying are and therefore their deaths become pointless and meaningless (perhaps that is what she intended). There is a lack of characterisation in characters such as Gale, Peeta, Katniss, Prim and their mother and this makes it harder for the reader to empathise with them - something not seen in the previous books. However, despite all of this, I did give it a 5 star rating after all and I did so because it deserved it. It has a lot of action and makes you continue to read until you know exactly what happens, which I admit is perhaps unsatisfying to some but overall, I believe that even the people who rated it badly only did so out of spite for they didn't like the way that Katniss suffers and ***SPOILER ALERT*** doesn't truly recover. ***SPOILER ENDED*** It is a must read and I would recommend it to anyone but it is not quite as good as the previous books but The Hunger Games and Catching Fire were absolutely outstanding.
P**L
Just as like my Catching Fire review, this book is magnificent. People can argue about the ending, how it was "rushed" but I find she made it perfectly. She gave the reader a sense of what happened, how the "Star Crossed Lovers" ended up, and give freedom to the reader for some specific things. Not so much that it feels rushed, but amazing. The book is just as long as its predecessors 391 pgs. The book comes with many twists and turns, and has an extremely realistic ending. It is not your typical love story. Twilight is baloney, this is extremely well crafted, and a successful ending only adds to the experience. The ending is true to the characters, and very great. Like Catching Fire, the quality is amazing, nothing wrong with the pages or hard cover, slip cover was also not ripped. The book gets 5 STARS.
C**N
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