i would be so pissed if i was Suzanne Collins and the world just completely missed the point of my books. the THG books resemble the real world so so so much, it’s honestly ironic when i see people preach and root for Katniss and then call the people with the exact same goal as her “savages” or “t3rrorists”, or just straight up ignore the political messages and aspects of the trilogy. it’s the “underdogs” being pit against each other to forget who put them there in the first place, how do people not realize? it’s similar to why books like Divergent rose to popularity so quickly. not only because of the trend that THG set, but because of the lack of “politics”. it’s basically a drama-romance with the appeal and aesthetic of rebellion to up the stakes for the white main character with the personality and backbone of a sack of flour and her dark tall and handsome brooding bad boy love interest
@samuelleask113211 ай бұрын
For real aye
@ophelie262011 ай бұрын
When I read the books I cried a little because it described exactly my life without the child killing reality show. This is literally what a third world (or fascistic developing countries) country looks like.
@khadija_1b11 ай бұрын
@@ophelie2620Exactly! For some of us it’s a reflection of our own reality and hits too close to home
@itzlazyalex181111 ай бұрын
when i saw a gale stan who was an 'israeli' and told me its just a movie..
@Anne-wf1vo10 ай бұрын
Someone on instagram comments was arguing and they basically said that the capitol isn't israel, the capitol is palestine. I wanted to shoot myself in the face
@promisemochi11 ай бұрын
fact of the matter is, young adults/teens aren't reading the YA genre like they used to. i've seen on booktok girls in middle school reading super dark, heavy disturbing dark romance" there was drama recently in the booktok sphere where an underage boy asked for book recs. he said his favorite book was the hunger games. he got so many responses from grown ass women telling him he was too "innocent" for reading those books and reccomending him things like "still beating" and that "adline book - all of which are even too dark and too disturbing for me at my big age of 30.
@jazg395011 ай бұрын
I’m 22 now, but when I was 12 I was reading the same dark stuff!! Except back then it was on wattpad, all these “dark romances” have the quality of wattpad books, most of them don’t seem to have more than one round of editing (if even THAT). Before you would need to have your book published through a real publishing company, now we have more indie writers which is great but the quality is starting to spread to big publisher books. I wish people would STOP asking for smut in every book? It’s very cringey and most of the time they have some out of pocket weird ways to describe the smut.
@promisemochi11 ай бұрын
@@jazg3950 yeah like i was reading fanfic back in the day as a teen/pre-teen and some of it had dark elements, but i still think very young teens being exposed to some of these books isn't a good thing. there's one book where two people are forced to grape each other and they fall in love after. and that's being pushed on tiktok as a romance. i'm all for indie books and i do genuinely think booktok is a good thing. it's exposing people to reading whereas they might not have enjoyed it before. but it feels like things that are flat out abuse are being read by very young teens that might not have the mental maturity to recognize, no this isn't a romance to strive for. and yes!!! i once saw a booktubr say she wouldn't read anything if it didn't have smut. that shuts off so many good books. i get personal preference and all that but a book doesn't have to have smut to still be good. now we're hearing of authors being told by their publishers they have to include smut. so unless they publish through an indie publisher, christian publisher, or self publish, they're closed off from a lot of markets.
@sophdixon801311 ай бұрын
I’m 16, and when I went to the book store I found full on smut books, in the CHILDREN’S section, not young adult CHILDREN, things like the love hypothesis, ugly love, ice breaker. Kids are being conditioned to be desensitised to all of this
@fourcatsandagarden11 ай бұрын
I suspect this might be a consequence of books like the Court of Thornes and Roses books being classified as 'YA' when they really shouldn't have been, but the characters were teens (or...young adults? I don't remember, but if they weren't teens then that just shows how older generations infantilized millennials to treat books about young adults as books for teens - and I know, "YA" means young adult but lbr YA basically means 'books for teens' not 'books for early 20-somethings) and the writing quality was 'YA' style. I know they eventually made a 'new adult' category for those but that never really stuck, from what I saw. And its fine for those books to exist but they should've been put on the shelves with the adult books. Also, Five Nights at Freddy's might be another reason. Back when my nieces were in first grade, I asked my brother what they were into, and he answered Five Nights at Freddy's. He didn't know what that was, but I, a terminally online person, did lol. Apparently their whole class loved it, and I can see why - the first few games didn't have an overt story unless you dug into it, it was just 'oh ho ho what if animatronics were evil and wanted to eat you!' and that is a pretty kid-friendly scare concept, but also even if you don't dig into the story to even realize there is a story in the first few games, the third game has a literal corpse that you can see inside the thing that's attacking you, so like...its a kid-friendly concept but is also really really dark. Which, I will say kids should be able to have kid-oriented horror, Goosebumps and A Series of Unfortunate Events and other things that ranged from spooky to scary were very popular when I was little, and its great. But Five Nights at Freddy's has also been a much harder gateway than they were.
@promisemochi11 ай бұрын
@@sophdixon8013 this!! people act like conservatives are pulling this out of their butts but it's a genuine fact. i bought a YA gay romance book a few years ago. it was marketed as a cute enemies to lovers book and i think the boys were fifteen in it. the book had a full on sex scene. like not a "fade to black" scene but full on detailed almost how-to of gay sex. i'm not a prude but i was shocked. this was a book marketed to kids between like 12-16. it gets a pass because it's "educating them" but i think it's so unncessary. i'm a grown adult and while smut doesn't always bother me, when it's so graphic and so detailed and lasts for pages and pages then it just feels over the top and that's how this book was.
@userabbie1711 ай бұрын
The pure irony of the clones being made purely for money and to jump on the bandwagon when THG has commentary on capitalism is so funny to me. They just stick in the tropes of THG and don't even put nearly as much effort and consideration as Suzanne Collins did.
@High.Hivemind_UXEАй бұрын
Especially when watching the movies. I love that the movies are so opposite of the message the books are trying to convey
@KeterClassHistory24 күн бұрын
No, the Hunger Games portrays a communist society where the parasitic radicals overthrew the government, made themselves the rich upper class, and then forced the actual productive people into slavery and now mistreat their children for the sake of entertainment. That's literally all communism is.
@GingerTyPerior10 ай бұрын
The guy who wrote GONE is married to the author + is a cowriter of Animorphs. That’s how you KNOW it’s good stuff
@Wingedartistcwolf10 ай бұрын
The Hunger Games was so good because Suzanne Collins had something to say beyond entertaining teenagers. It was a commentary on real politics, and was based on modern day America. There was a subtle pro-choice vs pro-life message, it talked about extreme classism and poverty, violence against children/child soldiers, propaganda. It was essentially an essay with names and faces. Collins wrote it with a clear purpose and a message, and yet people saw how successful it was and tried to copy it with none of the actual intent. That is why The Hunger Games as a work of fiction is still so relevant: because the message it delivers is still relevant a decade later.
@signebrummerstedt920510 ай бұрын
One of the things the hunger games did that the other dystopias I read didn’t du, was it was brutal on a whole different level. It wasn’t just a corrupt government killing citizens. It was a government making a sport of kids killing kids. That is brutal, and it was the way Collins wrote Katniss’ part of the rebellion as well as the effects all of it had on katniss. I don’t remember another dystopia having a main character who suffers from major PTSD for instance. And that’s why I believe it stands out - and why people not typically into ya dystopia will likely enjoy the book as well. I enjoyed a lot of the other dystopias, but the hunger games was something else. It was down to earth and scary and brutal
@nymiancomplex733610 ай бұрын
Another that I would say could be seen as similar in levels of brutality is the Gone series. But it’s not really your classic dystopia, I would say it barely fits the genre even tho it’s included tbh. So I see what you mean. But that series was allll about kids trying to survive in brutal conditions and had them fighting to the death as well, and there was some seriously disturbing elements of like gore and body horror at times (but like, not in a gratuitous way). Most of the main characters were dealing with serious ptsd after the events of the books (and during the later ones). It did handle some elements, such as one character’s autistic younger brother, in a pretty icky way though
@Lilackity11 ай бұрын
One dystopian YA series I don't hear a lot about is the Ender's Game saga by Orson ScottCard which was published in 1985. I guess it's because this series was mostly science fiction, but it had social commentary on governments, war, and militarism, and featured a teenage protagonist. Along with The Giver, Ender's Game was as a precursor to many of the themes seen in 2010s YA dystopian novels.
@Stella3000011 ай бұрын
Ender’s Game is my favorite book :)
@ringinn788011 ай бұрын
I think many people stopped being fans of it when the author started writing homophobic stuff online.
@lostarow294910 ай бұрын
I love that series
@Ellie_200710 ай бұрын
That book terrified me 😂
@Hi-sb5pt10 ай бұрын
I LOVE THAT BOOK OMG YESSSS
@vampiresquid263511 ай бұрын
I FORGOT ABOUT GONE that book was horrifying to me as a kid but i was obsessed with it. That acoholic kid who turned into stone? When that one kid had childrens hands covered in CEMENT?? The sentient coyotes in the cave??? The flying snakes?? Body horror fever dream book holy shit why was i reading that at like eight or nine Apparently it was a series but i just reread the first book over and over again in third grade
@BunnyHunny310 ай бұрын
Such a good series!
@DawnsHuntress10 ай бұрын
So so underrated!! I just went back and revisited the series recently
@funty42010 ай бұрын
Yeah the kid who turned to stone still makes me sick to this day
@BunnyHunny310 ай бұрын
@@funty420 oh yes! Orc experienced some horrific stuff in his life!
@emmaabadie303410 ай бұрын
Gone was the best !!
@asudebirtane824311 ай бұрын
They really thought after hunger games that they could get rid of all the messages and subtext, dilute it down to a love triangle with some rebellion sauce mixed in with a character that's not like the other girls... If you try to reheat the same stuff over and over again and resell it ofc it's gonna blow up someday. Btw my first introduction to dystopia was with uglies and I really don't remember anything about these books except for some really small scenes, for a few years I even thought maybe I made those books up in my mind
@zkkitty243611 ай бұрын
The only thing I remember were the hoverboards, the best part of the books easily.
@dessieangel102111 ай бұрын
Yep that was my intro to teen dystopia as well and I can’t remember much of it either 😂
@kwowka11 ай бұрын
There was basically no love triangle in the hunger games books, but they added it in to the movies post twilights success. That’s where the meaning eroded. So we can blame sparkly vampires, I guess?
@yoongiverse.10 ай бұрын
The part I like about the hunger games is how complex the world is. Like there are INSANE random details. So much overanalyzing to be done, but it’s never overanalyzing when the rabbit hole is so deep. There is however no analyzing to do at all when the quirky pretty girl falls in love and that’s it
@yoongiverse.10 ай бұрын
(also I read Uglies for battle of the books and I don’t think I hated it but it was again very basic)
@swipe_til_you_snooze11 ай бұрын
You should never judge a book by it's cover - especially with YA dystopia. It's always the ones with nice covers that end up letting you down.
@strawberrylime334 ай бұрын
Hahahaha, that's kinda true😊
@adelineg212710 ай бұрын
I can't believe no one's talking about The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer, Skyhunter by Marie Lu, The Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard, or Warcross by Marie Lu. Those 3 are definitely my favorite books of the ones not made into movies. I guess it's not dystopian, but I remember being obsessed with Renegades by Marissa Meyer. I know the superheroes vs villains premise is cliche, but I still really enjoyed the trilogy.
@abbyb643110 ай бұрын
I read renegades last year (after being a lunar chronicles since middle school, still my favorite series) and wanna read archenemies and the rest of the series later this year!
@maggiedunne108810 ай бұрын
renegades is my favorite book series and i’m glad to see people acknowledge it
@eva.kateee10 ай бұрын
i loveee warcross!! i never see anyone mention it anywhere and its one of my fav dystopian books. i also love the young elites series and the legend series also by marie lu (shes one of my favourite authors) ill have to check out skyhunter because so far i have loved all her books
@srishtysharma10 ай бұрын
The Red Queen is crap.
@alexandra4real3604 ай бұрын
The Lunar Chronicles is great but not a dystopian series. It's more of a futuristic retelling of a few fairy tales joined together.
@subtlefire725611 ай бұрын
I always love this mix of humour and thoughtful analysis you do. "He made it back" had me rolling 🤣
@yoongiverse.10 ай бұрын
I was looking for a comment about that i was wheezing
@selectivelysocial711710 ай бұрын
I really loved the Lunar Chronicles, so I'm glad to see it
@nadap503010 ай бұрын
my favorite ya dystopia is the unwind dystology by neal shusterman, it’s really well written and almost on par with the hunger games honestly but it’s criminally underrated and not many people have read it…..i highly recommend for anyone looking to get (back) into the ya dystopia genre!!!!
@fisamels22810 ай бұрын
Have you read his Scythe series??
@august676010 ай бұрын
I love the Unwind Dystology so much and I’m so glad someone mentioned it here! I swear I never hear anybody talking about it
@eva.kateee10 ай бұрын
@@fisamels228 i have!! i never see anyone mention it anywhere and its literally one of my favourite dystopian series ever
@fisamels22810 ай бұрын
@@eva.kateee same I’m OBSESSED it’s so good!!!
@csharper2310 ай бұрын
So dang good
@khadija_1b11 ай бұрын
14:39 I read Matched back in the day and couldn’t get past the whole “ooh arranged marriage bad” when it’s still prevalent in most cultures including mine lol. As a teen I remember thinking the protagonist was being ungrateful as she was literally matched with her best friend like she couldn’t have asked for a better outcome from such a big bad government matchmaking system. At least they didn’t match her with a stranger! (The bar was low for me)
@KaiInMotion11 ай бұрын
The point of Matched isn't that arranged marriage is bad. It's that forced marriage is bad. And honestly that's not even the point of the book, the focus is on censorship. The marketing just focused on the love triangle and romance to an insane degree when the actual tyranny depicted in the book is the surveillance state and the censorship of all art and media. The rebellion in that book is literally learning to write by hand and reading forbidden poetry. They did Allie Condie dirty by revolving all her marketing material around a love triangle that barely exists in the book while ignoring that she wrote a book about how wrong destroying art and culture is.
@khadija_1b11 ай бұрын
I’m sure the book tackled heavier issues and more thought provoking subjects, but as I mentioned, it’s been a while so the only thing I remember about it is the matchmaking. And I’m pretty sure I dnfed it before the plot got interesting. Also, thank you for the explanation! I find it obnoxious when the marketing focuses on love triangles when they’re not significant to the plot. They don’t know that they’re pushing potential readers away.
@Anna-B11 ай бұрын
I thought the premise was interesting, but I hate love triangles where the “winner” is super obvious.
@iimuffinsaur11 ай бұрын
I tried to read matched but I prefered the best friend over the other guy LOL so when it was really obvious who she was ending up with I dropped it.
@alteregobruh10 ай бұрын
@@Anna-B Well, it doesnt go on for the entire series, which is a breath of fresh air. It's settled by the end of the first, completely. Thank GOD, too. I can only handle so many love triangles where it's "be with cardboard or slightly decorated cardboard"
@iGotBulletproof-Insomnia10 ай бұрын
Okay, but I actually did really like The Host. It was an interesting character-driven story that _never_ needed to be a movie and I said thay as soon as they announced it. The book was never very visual, but I had really loved Wanda and the concept as a wholem
@7kraska10 ай бұрын
The Host is to this day one of my most favourite books. Such an interesting sci-fi concept and lovely characters.
@totally569410 ай бұрын
it would be decent if it weren't for the fucking PEDOPHILIA lol
@ahagotcha2 ай бұрын
One thing about Stephanie Meyer is she very good with these fascinating concept and execution for world building even though it reach into horror genre(imprinting lore) but still fascinating
@reganduffy568910 ай бұрын
Would love to see you unpack the delirium trilogy. Love is illegal and everyone lives in fenced in cities☠️☠️ and did I mention there’s a test? Has a lot of cliche YA Dystopia tropes, but also has some really unique plot points.
@totally569410 ай бұрын
the concept of that one really always makes me giggle, it's like the author wasn't even aware of the existence of gay people at all lmfao. like oooh wouldn't it be so horrible if you were told that simply being in LOVE was considered wrong by society and could be met with severe punishment - and we're using a bunch of straight people to make that point lol
@reganduffy568910 ай бұрын
@@totally5694 Forbidden love between two consenting adults that goes against the grain of what society deems legal and moral isn’t a brand new concept? YA dystopian novels have a lot of audacity. They change the color of characters’ blood or build a caste system and pretend they invented oppression. As if these experiences haven’t happened historically and currently to marginalized communities. It’s supposed to be unfathomable within our world because it’s a pretty, straight white girl being oppressed. Idk how all of these stories get picked up and approved by editors without a little more nuance.
@so_obsessed_5 ай бұрын
I only read the first book of that series bc it was maybe the worst thing I have ever read 😭😭
@tylerm362511 ай бұрын
something hilarious as well is that the gone series published books with stickers that said 'better than the hunger games' in the uk
@CheyeW1311 ай бұрын
yeah everything after THG felt like a "ride this commercial wave" moneygrab, *especially* the movies. think u hit the nail on the head abt the production dept for the *films* not treating it like a quick cashgrab (the marketing for those films........ another story kljhgf)
@RowanWisteria77710 ай бұрын
Ehhh... I wouldn't say that about scythe or lunar chronicles, but for the most part yeah. There are some hidden gems in there somewhere
@LoonyLovegoodOdity11 ай бұрын
Divya. There's too many things in this video for me to comment on. Your writing, your beats, your editing are KILLER in this vid! "Oh it's that boy from Journey to the Center of the Earth!.... he got out" I died. Also your american(hick) accent was so good?? All your points are well discussed, the order flows quite well. Anything you make I'm running to my laptop to watch. Would def love to see you review any of those books!
@EnforcerAJ11 ай бұрын
Thank you for putting Unwind on your little timeline chart even though you didnt talk about it
@selectivelysocial711710 ай бұрын
Unwind was so... horrifying? Shocking? I have a lot of feelings about this book
@molluscumlore11 ай бұрын
My friend I had a crush on gave me matched to read in middle school, so I did. It was... an experience. The whole time I was reading it I was imagining an alternate perspective where some other girls in the world are lesbian! and they kiss and it's forbidden love and more interesting than generic broody man #57!
@sarahharuka281111 ай бұрын
as a lesbian myself, these worlds are still just real life, lol, so many countries not letting we get married, how can we call it a dystopian when that's daily life? (and even if the country itself allow it, the people may not and try to get in your way, yeah, that's latam reality, asians are not the only ones that have to deal with that type of thing)
@RowanWisteria77710 ай бұрын
I haven't read the hunger games but i have read the scythe trilogy. I think it came out in 2016-ish?? Antways, its one of my favorite series (and my favorite dystopia) and totally deserves a mention.
@CarbonFang252 ай бұрын
Yeah they did a really good job, especially with the ending which I did not expect at all
@Evelyn_Okay6 ай бұрын
Here's a fun little Hunger Games fact: Collins's agent didn't believe she could sell the original manuscript to publishers so she forced her to add the love tringle bc Twilight was so popular at the time.
@antonm526711 ай бұрын
my fondest memories of my teen years was reading a new book every week :’) i would read so much books my grades would lowkey slip and my mom would get mad at me for reading books ??? i remember being so confused bc i was like …. ur getting mad at me for … reading? first generational asian parents lolol
@babs324110 ай бұрын
"Rolling my eyes so far that I started see my past lives" is the best way I've heard to describe some of these!
@gombehh11 ай бұрын
glad the anticipated mention of Lexa when talking about the 100 was indeed in the vid thanks divya!!
@Mogmilk9811 ай бұрын
Divya's back! Coming of age stories get to me (got to me in the youth times too) because whatever that first major success you got, especially if the odds were against you (say graduating high school for me), any further success don't feel the same. Sure you got your first salaried job! Woooo. Still broke lol. Reading/seeing someone else overcome their really big thing reminds me of that feeling.
@RandysaurusRex10 ай бұрын
I can't hate on The Selection. It let child me, who never read the books, live out my "The Bachelor but make it edgy" fantasy via Selection roleplay forums
@hiimstayxd10 ай бұрын
Me too, while reading it I didn't even realise it was YA dystopia, probably because it's mostly romance. I still love it cause it's great.
@RobotPilots11 ай бұрын
Luko EnergyBottom caught me off guard so hard.
@thejaybae829510 ай бұрын
"oh its that kid from journey to the centre of the earth... he made it back" I CACKLED
@heatherparisi825010 ай бұрын
The only YA dystopian series I can think of that I’ve read that is better then the hunger games is the unwind series by Neal Shusterman but the first book in that series was published a year before THG so….. perhaps it doesn’t count.
@benwasserman822311 ай бұрын
Well there's also the obvious reason. In the last ten years or so, reality has begun to resemble a YA dystopian novel. Except far less sexy, much dumber, happening in real time and all the adults treat these problems the way adults in A Series of Unfortunate Events treat Count Olaf's disguises. That is, they really should understand how obvious these threats are, yet rarely do and spend more time dismissing the kids' concerns.
@isthatachicken11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the speedruns😂 My first dystopian YA book was I think Divergent? My fav eas actually The Darkest Minds series in this genre. I didn't read The Hunger Games (atleast the first book) because it was always out of the library SOMEONE ALWAYS HAD IT.
@radmilaradmilac38252 ай бұрын
I LOVE The Darkest minds. I'm currently on book 3
@-Sweetgrass-Ай бұрын
The darkest minds was so good!
@outofpocket835111 ай бұрын
You never miss Queen❤. Do you have any dystopian book recommendations or book recommendations in general? I’d love to hear your thoughts on current booktok books! Thanks as always for the great political analysis!
@yoongiverse.10 ай бұрын
A big issue with other dystopias are that they almost all contain romance as you mentioned, but a huge one for me is when they have a good concept but then ruin it by the romance. Like The 100 sounds super cool, but everything I’ve read about it is that it’s a romance with a little bit of survival. I genuinely have an extremely hard time finding good YA books these days because I don’t mind a good romance but only if it’s good and I know it’s a romance going in. When the plot goes out the window for some dude I implode
@LeoTheDowl10 ай бұрын
You are right, The 100’s tv series is so much better than the books and that is a fact. Take it from someone that has obsessed with it for a while
@so_obsessed_5 ай бұрын
The 100 books are definitely kind of ridiculous with the way the romance takes over. But in the show, the romance is less important than the plot and the exploration of themes like leadership and war and what people will do to survive. The friendships are also well-developed in my opinion. Of course, it feels like a cheesy teen drama at times (especially in the first season), but the show is actually way better than people give it credit for.
@OnePieceOfEt11 ай бұрын
The hunger games is timeless. I remember the day my high school meet THG series. Social media wasnt this strong back then . There was a book stand in our school,just for 3 days.they were visiting schools and selling books I guess. My best friend brought this book, just because she liked the cover. She was obsessed when she read it but couldnt find the second and third books . Amd then I borrowed it, then half of our class 😂 in 2 months nearly all of our class have read the series it was that good 😂 then ofc ı bought my own trilogy. İt was the same story with 'the fault in our stars ". Literally none other book series made that impact in my class, not even twillight😂 İt was 10 years ago, and yesterday İ listened the audiobook and enjoyed it all the same.
@pageturnerreviews314810 ай бұрын
You need to check out Wither, Fever and Sever omg -- these books sat in my mind for years and still fascinate me to this day because they were Insane
@thenuyogi575111 ай бұрын
Omggg need to get Kittl!! Thank you for the recommendation Divya - Also love this style of vid smashed ittt
@Izzyd0esgaming11 ай бұрын
' And this girl (lexa) was hot ' damn right she was AND SHES NOT EVEN IN THE BOOKS. Shameful
@totally569410 ай бұрын
one thing that will always be hilarious to me is that despite bellarke being a thing in the books, the author didn't care about them in the show and was really rooting for clexa and loved that the show made clarke openly bisexual. it then inspired her to make OCTAVIA bi in the books and give her a girlfriend lmao.
@Livelaughlove-su6jy10 ай бұрын
The hunger games and the selection are so so good, the 100 was also alright. Gone is also quite good
@katyvee0110 ай бұрын
I read Matched as a teen and don’t remember much but it did introduce me to popular poems that jumpstarted my literature girly career kinda sad that the books teens get these days hav the content ud have to dig the internet for back then
@thisistori111 ай бұрын
gone is mentioned so i can die in peace
@altliza723711 ай бұрын
love your channel and views, happy to see am not the only person having certain views about booktube/tok whatever and pop culture also seldom do ytbers your age talk about pop culture and politics and its interdependence, love you!
@altliza723711 ай бұрын
lol, idk if i should be happy/proud that its only now ive come to know about the selections plot even after my years following booktube and seeing it everywhere, the untouchables? am not surprised if readers know the context and reality cause even us Indians act and appear to be oblivious of various caste issues here as if its a thing from the past.
@fleeingmoment47910 ай бұрын
I remember reading the Legend series, I enjoyed it fr
@EverlarkHinnyLuver10 ай бұрын
I read the first book in 15 days and I liked the dystopian stuff but I hate the romance. Like I know it’s Petty but like June got Days you know who killed. I started Prodigy and got two or three chapters in just couldn’t do it knowing it was probably gonna be heavy on the romance. I want to finish it as I have the series and even rebel but I just don’t support June and Day as a romance😭
@sinisiren699211 ай бұрын
Maybe it was last time ever in world to make dystopian stuff as entertainment. Now its too real. Sometimes i just feel that maybe in subconscious mind we knew worse is coming after 2020 and it was intersting way to cope with it. To have those elements that are rising, are ofc new story material and make possibility to make something really entertaining.
@sinisiren699211 ай бұрын
And as a librarian i know ya dystopia isnt popular anymore, least exciting genre ecen. If i was 13 seeing the news today, dystopian book would make just uncomfortable, maybe sad.
@PotatoWaffle-sl4xf11 ай бұрын
@@sinisiren6992 my 13 year old younger sister got the new hunger games book and I caught her bawling her eyes out at 3am in bed bc she thought that since adults were saying dystopia was becoming reality she would have to prepare to fight in the hunger games….it was funny at the time but thinking back on it….
@kaywho647710 ай бұрын
This is so strange to me. Because it’s like… war wasn’t invented in our lifetimes. Terrible things have been happening across history. In fact literacy across the globe has never been higher. Poverty rates have plummeted. Medical advancements mean people are living longer and healthier lives. While progress is slower than we’d hoped, action is being taken to shift to renewable energy and every year more and more animal species are being saved from extinction. A decolonisation effort is taking place across Africa where people are reclaiming their governments and land from neocolonial control, and African economies are expanding massively year on year. The world is extremely far from perfect but the idea that dystopia is dead because the world now is unlivably awful and completely bleak, and there’s nothing to look forward to, is extremely short sighted and frankly silly. Also very odd to mention 2020 because while the pandemic was terrible, the speed by which the vaccine was produced and the collaborative effort to distribute it and save lives was massive and a testament to how far we’ve come as a species. If all you want to see is doom and gloom it’s easy to miss and diminish all the great things people are doing to make the world better.
@sinisiren699210 ай бұрын
@@kaywho6477 good reminder. maybe im just so exhausted doing everything i can to climate change and worrying it all time, it makes my thinking like that.
@AuroniRahman7 ай бұрын
@@kaywho6477 exactly. there has always been war and famine and cruelty, since humans decided to build civilisations and desire more. but we made it through that. not without lasting scars, not without hard lessons learnt, but we made it. there is so much left to learn and to love, i think humanity can keep going through more hate and violence and disaster because it's connection and empathy that brought us so far. and it's what keeps us going. rumination is a hobby of mine, but looking through the world with grey glasses that are so dark you're almost blind are as bad as rosy ones that are so red you can't see other colours. there's so much beauty and good in this world but we have to keep looking for it and fighting for it. isn't that a message of so many rebellion centred dystopias? to fight for good? things aren't perfect but we're doing a lot better in many ways. i hope everyone can wake up and believe they can find good in something today. or they could do even one good thing today. just like divya said - maybe it's naive, or maybe it's optimistic. if i have to be 'naive' to make myself happy in this world, to be inspired to see good and do good, i think maybe it's worth it :) i hope you're all doing well, and you all make it through whatever life has thrown at you. i know not everyone has my view, and there are so many valid reasons for that, so much trauma that i could never understand. but i hope everyone can wake up and feel, see, or do some good today. you guys deserve it
@stillbuyvhs10 ай бұрын
I might suggest "The Tripods" as an earlier entry in the genre. It's a series of 60's novels about kids trying to escape & defeat robotic rulers which put brain control modules in everyone's heads.
@morebaileyskim11 ай бұрын
Cressa Fire Hydrant - DEAD
@sammicass11 ай бұрын
seeing you list all the dystopian books of the early 2010s reminded me of this one book/series?? called Bumped that I think you should read... basically a virus makes anyone over 18 infertile so teens get paid as surrogates and it follows these twins. I cant remember much of it but im curious of what your opinon is. another book from that time that I loved was the adoration of jenna fox series which deals with genetic cloning 👀👀
@hiddenkard955911 ай бұрын
Girrrrrrrl, I'm not lying, I was watching the new Hunger Games movie few days ago & I was like, what if, out of nowhere I decided to write a dystopian book then what would I write about. I actually, genuinely thought that probably I would write about a society where everyone is gay & being straight is illegal. But our main girl got some Divergent shit happening, so....she is bi. 🤣🤣I mean that is one of the dumbest dopest thing I've ever imagined. Also, Shout out to my South Asian girlies 🤍
@HarsimarKaur-nm7jx11 ай бұрын
Oh my God, I had similar idea sometime back 😭😭 We should def co-write this 🤭🤣
@iimuffinsaur11 ай бұрын
There is a 2 volume manga series and the plot is literally a meteor hit and made everyone gay and then you got MC and she isn't gay. She has a crush on her male best friend :O drama. Its fr such a silly plot.
@hollowwoods713010 ай бұрын
Problem with that is you're going to have bigots thinking you're an ally portraying "what the world will come to" and "how the good people are oppressed by the freaks"
@salem-0110 ай бұрын
@@iimuffinsaurthat sounds so stupid I’m crying I love it. God bless the gay meteor.
@AuroniRahman7 ай бұрын
@@iimuffinsaur this would be such an amazing comedy holy shit do you remember the name? is it as goofy as its plot deserves?
@animefreak26able7 ай бұрын
The selection review that you read was a joke comment if you didn’t catch that. They compared it to the bachelor (minus the bloodshed) right after that. It wasn’t meant to be serious about being like the hunger games.
@saoirse_the_thespian10 ай бұрын
I am so glad I am not the only one who felt that way about Matched I have never regretted reading a book and then I read that series
@salem-0110 ай бұрын
I remember reading the maze runner for the first time and being borderline pissed off all the time because I hated Teresa. I was really interested in group B when they got introduced though but that was mainly just because Im a lesbian and very excited by the idea of never having to deal with guys like ever and just being able to hang out with a bunch of girls in a big maze.
@so_obsessed_5 ай бұрын
I’m sorry this is so funny 😂 did you realize you were a lesbian?
@nohintshere11 ай бұрын
and i thought i was weird for writing hunger games fanfics in 2023
@jamanakdchunem10 ай бұрын
Oh my god I love you, we literally share the same thought process but you're so awesome at articulating your thoughts 😂💙
@kwowka11 ай бұрын
The people who loved the hunger games and now are backing the state controlling peoples movement - or the people who missed the race of all the characters in the book… like ??????? Anyway 🍉🍉🍉🍉
@-Sweetgrass-Ай бұрын
Ahh I’m so glad I saw The Darkest Minds series. It’s very nostalgic for me, even if it is not the best that I have read.
@fourcatsandagarden11 ай бұрын
....I just realized, I was aware of the Uglies/Pretties/Specials books, I remember a TON of people had the first book in high school (and I don't think anyone had the other two lol), and a very surface level explainer that was about on par with what Divya said about them in this...but I never thought about the parents before. Maybe that's just a consequence of age and time so it didn't occur to me before and then I forgot about them but like...so, if you live in one place until you become a pretty, does that mean if you have babies you become an Ugly again? Cos, your baby can't live with the pretties, right? Or are babies fine until they reach a certain age where they're deemed ugly now and dispatched to ugly town until they're old enough to be prettified? Is there someone who read the books who can tell me if that was addressed at all?
@asudebirtane824311 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly the babies are taken from their parents and sent to institutions like orphanages on the outskirts of the city and the parents kinda forget they exist...but it's been years I may have said something wrong
@KaiInMotion11 ай бұрын
Once you age out of being a pretty you're moved to suburbia to have and raise your kids which I think are called Youngs. They become uglies as preteens and are moved to dorms like the beginning of uglies to get ready to become pretties. These books were unhinged lol. The game economy in extras predicted our current social media landscape though.
@isobelandrews658811 ай бұрын
I remember it so vividly lol. I think I would defend this series today, it was a well-developed world despite the really basic framing and labelling that Divya points out.
@rotipandan11 ай бұрын
@@isobelandrews6588 i remember when i read it it felt like a really good series. but if you ask me now to tell you about the series, i honestly don't remember much lol. but for sure it's an underrated series
@adelineg212710 ай бұрын
As someone still obsessed with YA dystopia, I can tell you that the parents are considered "older pretties" (people 30+ years) and that children live with their parents until they're 6-years-old. During the time they live with their parents, the children care considered "littles."
@evanjones960226 күн бұрын
Got into comic books too. Avengers Arena uses the HG competition and dystopian book cover references.
@Livelaughlove-su6jy10 ай бұрын
The hunger games and the selection are so so good, the 100 was also alright.
@bruh-uo7yk11 ай бұрын
love this new vid sm and also love the presentation !!!!!
@holyghost_96310 ай бұрын
Glad to see the Gone books get some recognition. It sometimes feels like there's 0 public interest in them. Definitely was not suitable for 10 year old me, especially in the later books
@sheriffboss654411 ай бұрын
first of all i want to say that background are AWESOME i lvoe it i love it the vids these days ARE so GOOD and the background in this vid i want it
@sheriffboss654411 ай бұрын
its funny that matched was so bad bc ally condie can like actually write. receipts? summerlost. granted that book doesnt have any romance (and i think its technically middlegrade idk) but its like its one of my favourite healed my yr 6 soul after being scarred by the first 20 pages of matched its still good.
@theaceofswords11 ай бұрын
YESSS A 17 MINUTE DIVYA VIDEO I AM READY ‼️‼️
@ynat219811 ай бұрын
Part of it might be that those that grew up with thg are now “millennials”, maybe they kind of grew out of the genre (i haven't fully finished watching your video so sorry if you mentioned that!) . But also as others mentioned younger audiences are being exposed to waaay more darker themes that are s3ggsual in nature (think “euphoria”) so expectations are different. Too many adults are in the sphere of YA who are pushing things that are, frankly, not YOUNG adult. Just adult. I'm about to have a kid of my own and the future terrifies me :(
@salem-0110 ай бұрын
I feel like the only reason a lot of these books are YA are because the characters are around that age and… that’s it. Maybe it’s something about the writing style as well
@so_obsessed_5 ай бұрын
Nobody understands the maze runner like me 😭 those books are a better dystopian world than people give them credit for
@danielaroscerocervantes914211 ай бұрын
This is completely off topic, but….okay, so you know how the song All Too Well was made into a book in the short film? I would LOVE to see you turn songs into book covers!! It’s just an idea. You’re so talented, and I love all your videos!! 😃🙌🏻
@maokay10 ай бұрын
I could be wrong since I didn't actually do research on this. But didn't Hunger Games's inspiration partially come from the Japanese book/movie "Battle Royale"?
@Moonzie10 ай бұрын
I think it came from the Greek Minotaur Myth where they would throw a group of children into the maze as a sacrifice where the Minotaur resides.
@lavdoria51010 ай бұрын
collins says she had never heard of battle royale before writing the first book but i doubt that, she never had to admit since her story got more popular but she didn’t create this concept at all, and i actually think none of these books would exist without battle royale
@artimisjay807111 ай бұрын
Graphic designer here, totally agree with the fact that we need to make our lives easier, so you go girl.
@elliethefuzzyturtle2 ай бұрын
Calling the Lunar Chronicles a Teen Dystopian Hunger games Copycat is completely unfair and untrue.
@beatrixforeman15573 ай бұрын
I lovee YA dystopia!! I am even writing one right now I'm at 46,000 words. i think we need to bring them back. the one I'm writing is set in a future America where everyone is separated by race. The protagonist was raised by outside the effect of the government. She had a very abusive father who made her train to be an assassin(Which explains why she can fight) I have made sure to flesh out all the characters and it is written in a three parts the first and last one in Beatrix's pov and teh second in Mason's pov (Who is one of her friends but not a love interest.) this is a blurb of it In a world where history is forbidden, Beatrix, a young woman with a dangerous secret, joins a rebellion against a tyrannical government. Known as Dec, she becomes a beacon of hope, using her forbidden knowledge and combat skills to train fellow rebels. But when her past resurfaces in the form of her ruthless father, Dec must confront her own demons while leading the fight for freedom. With danger lurking at every turn, Dec must navigate a treacherous path, where trust is a luxury and betrayal is the norm. Will she be able to liberate her city and build a better future, or will her past consume her and destroy everything she's fought for?
@mimipipi12010 ай бұрын
Great video but I wanna mention the BEST YA dystopia from my teens which was Bloodtide by Melvin Burgess (1999)
@VesperOfRoses7 ай бұрын
The Hunger Games actually had something to say about American celebrity culture, reality TV, the glamorization of violent media, the way the government uses media to create and spread propaganda, etc., etc., and the fact that nearly all of these books glossed over the genuinely well-written social commentary and went "wow cool bad future!!" >_>
@yemaya789410 ай бұрын
thanks for all the book recommendations!
@Shaylovespopeye11 ай бұрын
I really don’t think that why people hate just the movies the last divergent they killed tris off the worst way possible it’s just terrible she should have won it’s really sad and i really love the hunger games team Peeta and katines thank you for video I love you please make more I really appreciate it
@brookejohnson991410 ай бұрын
"That already exists" it's almost like dystopian fiction is about taking something that exists in the real world and presenting in an exagerrated way in order to comment upon it. Sometimes badly.
@f1nnick.f1lms2 ай бұрын
FKN!NG LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE DYSTOPIAN BOOKS
@Shenanigans_33310 ай бұрын
11:51 crying screaming throwing up ur clapped
@helix339332 ай бұрын
Red RIsing is PEAK. Love that trilogy.
@SwagMyAssOffАй бұрын
trilogy? We're into part 6 in 8 books 😭
@Vishinskyscritic10 ай бұрын
First vid ive seen and the entire time i just couldnt get over how much she sounds like Rakiim, probably from the same part of England and as a scot, i feel weird that i found this accent satisfying
@dianabeloved10 ай бұрын
not enough appreciation in the comments for the journey to the center of the earth joke “….wow he made it back”
@RaeandtheDiamondCastle8 ай бұрын
The most dystopian I got was avatar the last airbender.
@xdsofie123911 ай бұрын
Can we get more Shrek romance, cause last video you made was very funny
@zamiyaFlow11 ай бұрын
1:53 that's not YA dystopian, that is Abject Horror
@lindadoucetowen10 ай бұрын
Was I the only one who read the more magically changed dystopian books, like Pendragon series and Gone series by Michael Grant. *Edit the Pendragon series is by D.J. Machale. Read like they were the same author.
@DawnsHuntress10 ай бұрын
Yes to the Gone series! I remember such vivid details of the storyline and everything the characters went through. I stopped at Lies because I was waiting for the other books to come out but I want to revisit the series and reread it
@sunnytravels948011 ай бұрын
Im a teen and i dont really like romance and stuff like that so i mostly read dystopian books and thrillers😊
@bethanchalmers91210 ай бұрын
Uglies was my first ya dystopia and the thing that got me about it was by the end of the trilogy it was like, yeah this whole thing was about environmentalism, and it just wasn’t? At least for the first two books anyway. Tbf though, it was unique in YA in how it developed its protagonist to be deliberately unlikable by the end, respected that.
@sakura_the_saltshaker8 ай бұрын
the last line killed me 😭
@thenuyogi575111 ай бұрын
Lmaooooo the last line ahaha the hunger games truly 8
@monsterlovefreak32 ай бұрын
i kinda liked the idea of matched didn’t get past the second book but i didn’t hate it
@KattyKay138 ай бұрын
I love the uglies series! It’s not very heavy handed on the dystopian genre but is a great first intro to Sci-Fy in my opinion! It’s a great babies first challenge of the status quo
@realainsmcf11 ай бұрын
FINALLY SOMEBODY TALKS ABOUT MATCHED I WAS STARING TO THINK I’D HALLUCINATED THAT GARBAGE IT WAS THE WORST THING I EVER READ
@oriole370210 ай бұрын
also very funny, glad i found ur channel ok sunshine and rainbows everyone :))))))
@oriole370210 ай бұрын
really great video! have a nice day
@Lilackity11 ай бұрын
Out of the wave of YA dystopian books, one of the ones I enjoyed the most was Chaos Walking. I felt like this series actually offered different political commentary because it focused on white colonialism and toxic masculinity as its core themes. I also felt like compared to other YA dystopian books at the time, the narration was accurate to how 13 year old boys thought. (I lowkey hated the ending and entire 3rd book, but at least the first book was good)
@muhammad11698 ай бұрын
I think the other best dystopian series other than the hunger games is the maze runner. Idk why, i just started to love it.
@danielortiz78783 ай бұрын
Does "The City Of Embers" count as a YA dystopia? Cause i liked the book and the movie.
@The_onset_tutor10 ай бұрын
Everything in the hunger games and the books before was smart and thought out. Everything after that was stolen and dumbed down.
@TheHonourableDaisyWells11 ай бұрын
I'd love you to react to ' you could be so pretty' it's a great book and it would be interesting to see your thoughts on it.
@victoriangm777410 ай бұрын
I eat garbage YA dystopia up like catnip even in my 20s, but even I couldn't finish the Shatter Me series (although I've never read Matched...maybe that's worse...it sounds worse.)