BOOKS

This Isn't Child's Play

'The Hunger Games' portrays a world where kids must kill each other to survive. The shocker? It's a book for 12-year-olds.

 
 
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

 

It doesn't sound like the plot of a children' book: 24 kids in the ruins of North America who are forced by the government to kill each other in a "Survivor"-like contest. But Scholastic is printing 200,000 copies of Suzanne Collins' brand-new "The Hunger Games," for ages 12 and up. It's a can't-put-it-down story by the author of the "Underland Chronicles" (for ages 9 to 12). In that popular, critically acclaimed series, a boy, Gregor, falls through a grate in his New York City apartment laundry room floor into the Underland, where humans and giant rats coexist (not well). NEWSWEEK's Karen Springen talks with Suzanne Collins, 46, about how her 18 years of writing for kids' TV shows was good preparation for penning best-selling novels. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: How did you get the idea for your books?
Suzanne Collins:
Both the "Gregor" series and "The Hunger Games" are what I call lightning-bolt ideas. There was a moment where the idea came to me. With "The Hunger Games," the lightning bolt sort of hit at a moment when I was channel surfing between reality TV and the coverage of the Iraq war.

Didn't some classical tales play a role, too?
If I have to pick one story that most influenced "The Hunger Games," it would be the Greek myth of Theseus, which I read when I was about 8-years-old. In punishment for past deeds, Athens periodically had to send seven youths and seven maidens to a labyrinth. In the maze was this Minotaur, and it would eat them. Minos, the King of Crete, was furious with the Athenians. They had taken the wrong side in a war, and he held them responsible for the death of his son. In punishment, they were going to have to send their children. Apparently there was nothing the Athenian parents could do about it. And then Theseus comes along. He's the prince of Athens. He volunteers to go and kill the Minotaur, and that's when it stops. In her own way, Katmiss (the young heroine of "The Hunger Games") is Theseus in terms of the opening of the story.

How did your career as a kids' TV writer help with your novels?
The first show I did was in 1991. It was a live-action show called "Hi Honey, I'm Home!" Since then, I've written on six or seven shows. [Others include "The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo," "Clarissa Explains It All," "Generation O," "Little Bear," "Oswald" and "Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!") I just finished up a last "Wubbzy!" episode a couple months ago. I did it simultaneously with "The Hunger Games." It was an excellent mental break because "The Hunger Games" is so dark. "Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!" is just delightful, and no one dies in it, and it was almost good therapy.

Did you learn good storytelling from kids' TV?
I started as a playwright. Any sort of scriptwriting you do helps you hone your story. You have the same demands of creating a plot, developing relatable characters and keeping your audience invested in your story. My books are basically structured like three-act plays. I'm very conscious of pacing because you get very little downtime in television.  You have to be moving the story forward and developing the characters at the same time. Another television thing I use is I tend to end my chapters on some sort of cliffhanger, which can involve physical peril, or the moment a character has a revelation. That seems like the natural place to break because we do that in television so the viewers will come back after the commercials.

"The Hunger Games" is going to be a trilogy. Why do you like series?
"Gregor" is even five parts. Having written for television, the idea that you spend all this time creating this world, developing these characters, and then you're only going to use them for one story?! In television, we do 65 [episodes]. That's the magic number because at 65, you can syndicate. The stories in "Gregor" and "The Hunger Games" are larger. They require a series format. If I had written "Gregor" as one book, it would have been over 1,700 pages for a 9- to 12-year-old audience. That would have been daunting.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: bluebarrett @ 10/06/2008 4:15:07 PM

    Battle Royale was a book before it was a movie, and, yes, the plots are very similar: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Royale

  • Posted By: ridley321 @ 09/12/2008 10:05:43 AM

    I agree with the post comparing the HUNGER GAMES with the Japanese movie called Battle Royale. In fact the plots are so similiar I would suggest its plagiarism.

  • Posted By: LibraryLaur @ 09/12/2008 9:36:58 AM

    I'm thrilled to read an interview with Collins, but I'm a bit annoyed at the sloppy editing. The main character in Hunger Games is Katniss, not KatMiss, and The Underland Chronicles is about Gregor, not Gregory. Plus, Collins was 8 years old, not 8-years-old -- hyphens are only necessary when the phrase is being used as an adjective. After all, it is an article about literature!

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

 

Up and Coming Newsweek Stories on Digg

Discover more Newsweek content on Digg