Lowry, Lois (1993). The Giver. Bantam Double Day Dell Books.
Young adult, middle grade. Dystopian
Newbery Medal Winner
I gave this 4.5 out of 5.0 stars.
I
really wish I had read this when it first came out, as Lowry clearly
planted a seed for many of the future generations of dystopian writers.
She painted a very detailed picture of a world in which science and
technology have developed to a point the government can create sameness
for all its citizens. To swipe a line from Willy Wonka, happiness and
harmony are what it's all about. Only a very limited few know what the
rest of them are missing, but that's really all it takes for a yearning
to start, and when there's yearning, there's change. Think Aldous
Huxley's BRAVE NEW WORLD, minus the sex.
In all the harmony, the
characters and this world are deeply disturbing, and the story poses
many points to ponder about what makes us human -- free will, choice,
guilt, sexuality, and morality to name a few qualities -- and what we
are if those aspects are removed.
THE GIVER has an outstanding
plot, intentionally written characters (we are only supposed to form
specific feelings for those we do), and wonderful, rich writing. It has
very minimal violence, no language issues, and no sexual situations --
only a reference to a teenaged boy's stirrings and no elaboration on
that.
So why the 4.5 and not the 5.0? The ending. The ending just didn't do it for me and was a little disappointing, whether future companion novels were coming or not. I will probably continue to read the other three
books, but I'm not sure they will mend the ending to the first. Want to see my signed copy? Click here.
UPDATE: Movie coming out in 2014! Watch the Movie Trailer HERE!
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