
Moments of lyricism and literary flourishes help to leaven the grimness as the backstory of Haymitch Abernathy, eventual mentor to Katniss Everdeen, takes centre stageFrom the publication of the first volume in 2008, Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games series was an enormous hit, later adapted as hugely successful films. Inevitably, a prequel was spawned, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (2020), now followed by Sunrise on the Reaping, set about a quarter of a century before the events of the original trilogy.The books’ success partly lay in Collins’s skilful refashioning of an ancient story, the myth of the Minotaur, which she placed in a futuristic world, giving agency to the weak to overthrow the powerful. But it also came from her close attention to the effects of social media and reality television, as she examined the line between the authentic self and pretence, and how narratives can be manipulated for advantage. In this new book Collins returns to these familar themes with the ...
Suzanne Collins' "Sunrise on the Reaping," a prequel to "The Hunger Games" set 25 years before the original trilogy, explores familiar themes of media manipulation and power dynamics within Panem. The story centers on Haymitch Abernathy, mentor to Katniss Everdeen, and the brutal reality of the Hunger Games, where teenage tributes are forced to fight to the death as a form of entertainment and control. The novel critiques social media, class divisions, and the contrast between the Capitol's decadence and the districts' poverty.