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Our Reading Guide for Mockingjay (Hunger Series #3) by Suzanne Collins includes a Book Club Discussion Guide, Book Review, Plot Summary-Synopsis and Author Bio. - Page #1
Close to the end of the book, Katniss worries that despite everything the rebels have gone through, it's all been for nothing: All those people I loved, dead, and we are discussing the next Hunger Games in an attempt to avoid wasting life.
Study questions, project ideas and discussion topics based on important themes running throughout Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins. Great supplemental information for school essays and projects.
24 wrz 2024 · Mockingjay Book Discussion. Katniss's reasons behind saying yes for another Hunger Games. Would you vote "yes" or "no" to having a Hunger Game for the Capitol and why?
Mockingjay Full Book Analysis. Katniss, the protagonist, deals with the reality of war as her defiance during the Hunger Games results in open warfare in the struggling districts of Panem against the Capitol. The conflict with President Snow, the antagonist, becomes less personal as more people are drawn into the war.
Mockingjay, by Suzanne Collins, is a 2010 young adult dystopian novel about government control and loss of individualism and is the third book in Collins's Hunger Games Trilogy —following The Hunger Games (2008) and Catching Fire (2009).
Mockingjay explores the themes that were introduced in the prequels, including war, manipulation, the struggle for control, and love and relationships. Many symbols are introduced in this novel, with Katniss herself turning into a symbol of hope for the rebels.