The Dystopian Timeline to The Hunger Games [INFOGRAPHIC]


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I think it means whether men or women enjoyed/read the book more (I may be wrong though...)."
I certainly don't think I'd enjoy that society. But i definitely did enjoy reading about it.




--SunHi Mistwalker
www.sunhimistwalker.com
The Shelter
After The Darkness: Episode One



Will it be an old-school Sci-Fi? A Super Happy Warm and Fuzzy Story where everything is just peachy? A romance about Vampire-Zombie hybrid (they're both the undead, right?) who love shape shifting were-unicorns? A wacky tale about a boy who runs away from home because his mom makes him eat sauerkraut every single morning (oh wait...I think that's been done.)? Something else entirely? Only time will tell.
Still, thanks for posting this. It's quite interesting and a great reader advisory tool to use while people still want Hunger Games read-alikes.



I don't see how apocalypticism will ever go out of vogue. It's been in fashion as long as people have been alive, and has kept pace with the growth of sci-fi for over a century. And unlike Y2K, it's not something that can simply pass us by. With every age, there are new chances for us to kill ourselves off.
Just to clarify, are you saying the old-school sci-fi was happy by comparison? Because it really wasn't. In fact, I did a research series on dystopian versus utopian sci-fi, and the balance sheet was VERY one-sided, like at least 5 to 1.


I hope the next trend will be climate change, because it's something we're having right now. It's important to discuss it, even in the frame of fiction.
Anyone knows of climate change novels?

You are completely right. It's exactly battle royale! I can't believe no one published it and confronted Collins!


wall photos of Dystopian books are being added daily check us out!

My 10th grade class is reading "Brave New World", "Farenheit 451", and "1984". I would love to use your visual graphic for a bulletin board on dystopia. Is that possible?



Battle Royale is great but even this is just a rehash of the Theseus and the Minotaur mythology. Collins only discovered the comparison after having been published as she hadn't seen or read Royale. She did however heavily reference Theseus, Spartacus and the Greek and Roman political structure in the trilogy. Katniss is also likened to the Greek Goddess Artemis. All stories have their root in some kind of historic or mythological narrative, however you argue it.

Jennifer, have you read He, She, and It by Marge Piercy? Great book with this theme (and others). Can't recommend it highly enough.

That's what I was thinking too. Biology is one of it's main themes.


Yes! But no one will want to publish those!