This book had a great plot that never became boring. Once I was kinda was getting bored with the book some new problem would arise
Once we move ahead with the novel, the most enjoyable for me was the character build up
Dystopian Complications- Anthem VS. The Maze Runner “ And if you 're not needed by you brother men, there is no reason for you to burden the earth with your bodies…”(Rand, 1.20) Dystopian literature is a type of genre that is dark and like everything has just lost all common sense. Teens are going into the dystopian fandom because it 's like the music the listen too. “Against the rules.
I took the book to work with me and read there on my breaks. I simply could not put it down. Which is also what I saw from other people that have read this book. I would without a doubt recommend this book to anyone that needed a story to read for a class because the story is exciting and they would enjoy doing this assignment. Not only would I recommend it for a student’s book report, but i would recommend this book to anyone just looking for some leisurely reading.
The Giver and The Maze Runner share some similarities and differences. They both are dystopian societies and are set in the future. But in the Giver, people aren’t trapped in their world; they can get out if they wanted to. In the Maze Runner, people are trapped without consent and it is only through immense hard work, they can get out into the real
going on in the movie/novel to their own personal lives. These are the reason that I think teens like dystopian stories. So evidently I think teens relate to dystopian novels/movies like “Anthem” or “The Maze Runner”, because of the relatability of them to their own personal lives. How can modern teens relate to the dystopian novel “Anthem By: Ann Rand”?
This book was interesting for me because it allowed me to relate to a character. I love reading novels that not only allow me to feel a connection with a character, but allow me to relate to their personality or
“Ask any reader who has seen the movie version of a favorite novel, and the answer will usually be, "The book was better. " That 's because readers of a novel have already made their own perfect movie version” (Corliss et al., 2005). It would appear that Corliss is correct because many people who have read The Hunger Games book would say that it is better than the movie. Although the Hunger Games movie is entertaining, it is very different from the book.
The novel, 1984, can be most closely compared with the popular book and movie series, The Hunger Games. Overt comparisons between the two novels include their futuristic approach and the dystopian societies that emerged after periods of war. Additionally, both novels highlight poverty as a highly effective method of control. Building on that method of control, both novels have a strict hierarchy of society used to control the masses.
"Just follow me like your life depends on it. Because it does. "(Dashner 361) In where a boy named Thomas finds himself in a maze with several other boys and no memory of how he got there or his past.
Sometimes the book did not seem realistic because of the exaggeration that was in it but it also made the book kind of confusing. Even though the exaggeration has a negative effect to the book it does not mean it ruined the book. The book is overall good, but less exaggeration would make it
In both series the way societies are set up, and the government is portrayed, and the conflicts of both protagonists are very different. Both series are alike in a lot of ways but there are minor characteristics and plot elements that make them different, and interesting in their own way. Both the Hunger Games and Divergent take place in dystopian societies. Both societies are described as very futuristic, but it is also a place where the people live in fear and are oppressed. Both settings take place in the United states.
Collins has added all this elements about The televised Hunger Games without the reader noticing right away just how important reality TV is in this novel. What i have enjoyed most about this novel is just how important every detail in it is and the way the novel basically represents our
Running the Maze Imagine being trapped inside of a place with no memory of how you got there and the only way to get out was through a maze. James Dashner’s young adult, science fiction novel, The Maze Runner is about just that. There were a brunch of themes in the novel but the most important ones were maintaining rules and orders, making sacrifices, never giving up, and manipulation, even though something may look simple it might be harder than it seems. All these themes were practiced by Thomas and other Gladers in the Glade. Dashner also wrote the sequels to the Maze Runner, The Scorch Trials and Death Cure.
Also, the story is stimulus, you will really engage into the book but I won't recommend reading it at night because I am scared of the "monster"