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by Lois Lowry

I first read The Giver in 6th grade. It...it gave me faith in the books teachers choose for their students. (Needless to say, that faith died early in high school). Still, I have long appreciated my middle school teachers' good tastes.
The Giver is about a boy named Jonas living in a utopian community. Everyone is happy, everyone has their place. No pain, no fear, no inconvenience. As one who is just finishing college applications, I've gotta say, that sounds pretttty nice.
But it's only when Jonas comes of age and receives a unique and important task that he realizes, there are other things missing too...

This was a beautiful moment in my childhood. One of those times you always remember, you know? When your teacher actually places a really good book into your hands. And then issues the instruction, "Now we're going to read this as a class. We'll spend this week reading and discussing chapter one."
.
..
...
Yeah, right.
I tried. I really did try, okay? But you don't...you just don't do that. You don't hand me a book and tell me not to read it. I paced myself. I started with only one chapter. Okay, two chapters. I even read it in class, though not exactly with the class. I sort of listened to the discussion, with one ear, but there was a buzzing in the other. That book was crumbling my willpower.
The next day I read to chapter 5. Then a few more. Less than a week in, I cracked. I was gone. Smoke floated up from the frantically flipping pages, which would've made my teacher wonder except she was going over some fascinating symbolism with the class. 

So much for pacing myself. Anyway, Lois Lowry is a fantastic author. The Giver is insightful, entertaining, and sometimes frightening. It's a book that makes you think, and leaves you wondering. The characters are believable and well-developed, the setting and atmosphere of the community so clear that you feel like you're there. It's a great commentary on what we lose when life becomes too perfect.
The companion books, Gathering Blue and The Messenger, are equally insightful in their own ways. This is one of those magical sort-of series in which each book can stand alone but they fit together. There's a newly released fourth book too, called The Son. I'm itching to read it, but hey, look, there's another application essay calling.
Happy reading.

for: older kids on up
Content rating: 4/5  Quite clean, but there are issues brought up that many find disturbing. Apparently this is a challenged book, whodathunkit? Anyway, I don't want to give anything away but there's some sad deaths and some mild sexual attraction. I had no problem reading this as a 6th grader, but parents of aspiring younger readers may want to check it out.
My enjoyment: 5/5 

 
Recently, I've had the vicariously exciting experience of having a friend of mine visit the Catching Fire filming set and meet the actors as well as the author of Hunger Games. My friend faithfully passed on my message to Suzanne Collins that Gregor the Overlander is still closest to my heart (particularly Ares). I didn't want the Underland Chronicles to be neglected, you see. That said, I feel it would be unjust to neglect mention of Collins's equally amazing, and much more popular, Hunger Games series.
The Hunger Games is pretty awesome. No doubt you know all about it because of the Harry-Potter-and-Twilight-like status it's achieved. I'll run through a quick summary here:

Katniss Everdeen lives in poverty-stricken District 12 with her family, who barely scrape by on what Katniss can shoot and forage in her illegal excursions to the woods. Katniss's world is turned upside down when her little sister, Prim, is chosen as a tribute during the annual Reaping held in each district by the tyrannical Capitol of Panem. Desperately, Katniss volunteers to take her sister's place and becomes a contestant in the 74th Hunger Games: a televised, forced fight to the death between youth from the various districts. Of 24 tributes, only one will leave the arena alive and be showered with wealth and glory. The districts, crushed in the rebellion against the Capitol 74 years before, have long been resigned to this state of affairs. But in the second and third books, the flames of hatred between districts and capitol are fanned, and Katniss Everdeen emerges as the face of a new rebellion.

This series is great, the characters are imaginative and well-developed, the intrigue is intriguing, the plot and love triangle original and captivating. It is extremely violent though. Graphic in parts. I'm just impressed and delighted they kept the movie PG-13. 
Fun to read, and grimly told in Katniss's sarcastic tones. 
Make sure you have Dr. Seuss or something happy to read when you're done.

Genre: futuristic/sci-fi/fantasy/romance
for: teens and adults
Content rating: 2.5/5 For violence, hatred and depression, some nudity (not sexual), and some mentions of forced sexual relationships.
My enjoyment: 5/5