There’s no denying
that Rutherford County got swept up in Hunger
Games mania this year. Murfreesboro placed on Amazon.com’s list of the top
20 cities most obsessed with the dystopian thriller, and the county has been
buzzing about Katniss and her bow and arrow for months.
In Rutherford County, it started
with an initiative called One Book, a program created by local literacy
non-profit Read To Succeed aimed at promoting literacy in our community. One Book is a collaborative project of Read To
Succeed, Barnes & Noble, Linebaugh Library System, and United Way, created
to challenge readers in Rutherford County to join in reading the same book.
In case you’ve missed this year’s One Book madness, Read To Succeed’s choice The
Hunger Games tells the story
of a totalitarian state called Panem that has risen from the postwar ashes of
North America. Each year, a boy and a girl between the ages of 12 to 18 are
chosen from each Panem district to compete in the Hunger Games, a gladiatorial
competition in which only one teen can survive. This battle is televised and
played throughout all of Panem, forcing its residents to watch with a mix of
grisly fascination and tyrannical obligation.
It’s a bloody, at times gruesome, tale wrought with
messages about our culture’s fascination with reality television, our
desensitization to violence and the danger of an all-too-powerful government.
And from its intended young-adult audience to their parents and grandparents,
we can’t stop reading.
As the fifth year of this event comes to a close, One
Book's committee invites the community to formally submit their opinions—whether
you loved or loathed The Hunger Games—
in a survey and to keep reading this summer with One Book's 2012 supplemental
reading list.
Visit readtosucceed.org/onebook.htm
to fill out a quick survey before July 1st and you will be entered
to win a gift card to JoZoara’s coffee shop in Murfreesboro.
Read on to find out what One Book
thought about choosing this year instead of The
Hunger Games and for a list of what to read next if you loved the young
adult novel.
Suggested Summer Reading (including titles considered
for 2012’s One Book)
·
Extremely
Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer - A boy embarks on a New York
City treasure hunt, following clues from his father, killed in the World Trade
Center attacks.
·
People
of the Book by Geraldine Brooks - The incredible journey of a 15th-century
Hebrew manuscript is discovered through a series of microscopic clues;
this fictional take on a real-life event makes for spellbinding novel.
·
Matterhorn:
A Novel of the Vietnam War by Karl Marlantes - The brutality of war is detailed
in this extraordinary novel by a decorated Vietnam veteran. Matterhorn is
considered by many critics as one of the best accounts of the Vietnam war to
date.
·
The
Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman--The lives of a group of misfit reporters and
editors of an English language newspaper in Rome is portrayed in their lovable
imperfection.
·
Kindred
by Octavia Butler - A young woman is transported from her life in modern-day
California to the antebellum South in this magical novel.
·
Let
the Great World Spin by Colum McCann - A look at the intertwined lives of New
Yorkers in the 1970s, connected through a tightrope walker at the top floor of
the World Trade Center.
·
To
Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee--An American classic told by young Scout Finch
who, along with her brother Jem, are caught up in the racially charged events
in the Deep South in the 1930s.
NONFICTION
·
The
Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot (the runner-up choice of
this year's One Book): A young African-American mother of five who died in 1951
has likely saved your life. Her cells, harvested without her consent, started a
medical revolution and multimillion-dollar industry, yet her family can’t
afford health insurance.
·
A
Pearl in the Storm by Tori Murden McClure (MTSU's Community Summer Read for
2012): The first woman to row alone across an ocean
·
Unbroken
by Laura Hillenbrand: A World War II story of survival, resilience, and
redemption
·
Same
Kind of Different As Me by Ron Hall: A modern-day slave, an international art
dealer, and the unlikely woman who bound them together
If You Loved The Hunger Games, try:
Camp
Half-Blood Series- Rick Riordan
Follows the
story of Perseus “Percy” Jackson as he discovers his true heritage as a
descendant of Greek gods and fights to save his friends and family on Mount
Olympus.
The
Chronicles of Narnia- C.S. Lewis
Fantasy
series following the stories of the Pevensie children and their friends, who
enter the magical land of Narnia through portals in their own homes and
backyards, and their adventures with the lion Aslan, the King of Narnia.
Ender’s
Game- Orson Scott Card
A gifted
young boy, Ender, may be the earth’s only hope in a global war against an alien
army.
The
Inheritance Cycle Series- Christopher Paolini
A fantasy
series in which a teenage boy, Eragon, and his dragon, must lead a rebellion to
overthrow a wicked lord.
The
Lord of the Rings- J.R.R. Tolkien
Fantasy
series in which Frodo Baggins, a hobbit, must band with his fellowship of
hobbits, elves, dwarves, men, and wizards in order to destroy the Ring of Power
created by the evil Lord Sauron.
A
Wrinkle in Time Series- Madeleine L’Engle
Science-fiction
series based on the Murry family whose gifted children seek to find their
father, a government agent, who has mysteriously disappeared into a fourth
dimension.
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