Dead End Follies discussion
The Hunger Games Debate Thingie
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Benoit
(new)
Jun 22, 2011 04:44AM

reply
|
flag
Oh, then I will have some fun reading it and picking it apart...and Jennifer Lawrence would be a terrific cast for that.



Get on with it Ben, it's only a little book.
Josie has taken it hostage right now. After six pages she told me: "It's really good", which is very unlike her. By page forty, she told me three time. There's something to it, I'm sure.

Sorry, I didn't mean to get all feminist ranty, but the implication, Mooderino, was that because it's about a girl or has a romance sub-plot, it's somehow not as good. I don't think that's true or fair. Harry Potter wouldn't be categorized that way, and there's teenage love all over that series, in a really angsty kind of way in parts.
I didn't interpret Moody's comment like that. I was it as a "target audience" type of comment. I mean, you can't please everybody with your writing. Unless you're Francis Scott Fitzgerald.

It's not true but girls are the target audience for romance. Go to a romantic comedy and count the heads in the audience. It's just not something guys are into. Maybe Moody is guilty of saying it a little cavalierly, but I don't think he's fundamentally wrong in what he's saying. Just not nuanced enough

Romance has about as much plot space in the Hunger Games as it does in Harry Potter. Harry Potter, however, successfully caught the interest of both boys and girls, men and women. The Hunger Games have not had the same success, I'd wager, because the main character is a girl, automatically rendering the books "girly" and leading people to conclude that they are "very specifically written for girls."
And there's my rant for the day.

My point was that it was HG is aimed at girls. That's not necessarily good or bad. The defensive posture taken by some of you here is understandable but not really necessary. Anyone who wants to can visit my blog (http://moodywriting.blogspot.com)and see my analysis of HG and a bunch of other books in various genres including romance (The Notebook). I don't care who a book is aimed at I break things down in terms of story.
The reason men react poorly to most romance type fiction (books or films) is this:
A woman tells a man she loves him, they have sex, the man is satisfied she loves him.
A man tell a woman he loves her, they have sex, she worries if he really meant it, if he used her...
That difference is a key component of romance novels and of HG. We (blokes) don't need to dwell (and by dwell I mean wallow) on the question of is it really love or is it a lie to get something.
Romance as attraction between two people is universal. Romance as wish fulfillment fantasy as seen in most romance novels is not.
I assume you still haven't read it, Ben. Give the other half a nudge why don't you?

I'm about 130 pages into it. Not bad at all, so far. Collins is a little too formal for my taste, but you know. Strong female archetype, a few ideas on entertainment. It could be worse. She deliberately slows the pace for romance, which can be annoying, but I like the tone she keeps around Katniss.