Sunday, 6 October 2013

Let The Games Begin!


(There are spoilers in this post. If you haven't read the Hunger Games trilogy, this may spoil suspense. You have been warned.)



On the ashes of a continent once known as North America, there is a country called Panem. It has twelve districts ruled from a shining city called the Capitol.
Seventy four years ago, the districts rebelled against the Capitol. The rebellion was mercilessly crushed. The thirteenth district was destroyed, and as a warning to the survivors and their descendants, the officials of the Capitol created the Hunger Games. Every year, two children- a boy and a girl- called tributes, between the ages of twelve and eighteen, are chosen from each district. They are sent into an arena with one goal- to be the last of twenty four tributes to survive.

That is how the first book of the trilogy, The Hunger Games, starts. The series was a huge hit and caused major arguments in our class. So naturally, I had to choose characters from the books for my voting survey. I chose Katniss Everdeen, the heroine, Peeta, the boy tribute from District Twelve in love with her, Gale, Katniss' best friend, and Rue, Katniss' twelve-year-old ally in the Seventy-fourth Hunger Games (she dies).

How did they do in the polls? I'll take each character separately.

Music-loving Rue. The twelve-year-old from District Eleven who is chosen for the Hunger Games. When the audience is asked whether there will be any volunteers, there is only the sound of the wind in the trees. Nothing else. 
So Rue is in the Seventy-fourth Hunger Games. She reminds Katniss of her sister Prim, and becomes Katniss' ally in the Games.
Rue loves music, and sings well. She also is fierce and scores high in the training session, and is a good ally to have. She points out the tracker jackers above Katniss' head, saving her life.
Rue dies when the boy from District One throws a spear through her body. The scene where she dies is cut out from the official film that is shown once the Games are over, enraging Katniss, who had killed the District One boy seconds after the spear was thrown. She only appears in The Hunger Games, but is mentioned many times in the later books, such as when Katniss is listing her reasons for hating Snow, and when Peeta paints a picture of Rue dying in the Games. She is one of the tributes on We Remember in the third book.

Rue scored 13, tying with Hermione in fourth place. Quite a few voters hadn't read the book and didn't add or subtract points from her. Most of the ones who knew her voted positively. A couple of people voted negatively for Rue. What are the flaws in her character that caused that?
Maybe it's because there are so few that those voters didn't like her. They thought her personality was too perfect. Several of my classmates, including me, are not big fans of perfect characters, especially if they play a big part in the story. Most popular characters have flaws- it's what makes them likeable. However, somehow Rue is a very popular character, yet it's hard to find flaws in her personality. That 'perfectness' turned a couple of voters against her.

Gale, the fighter. The only one of the four I chose who wasn't a tribute. Gale Hawthorne is Katniss' best friend, and is two years older than her. He knows Katniss better than even her mother does, and promises to help her family if she dies in the Games (which she doesn't). He's good at setting traps and he becomes a miner when he is spared from the Hunger Games at the age of eighteen, the last year of eligibility. 
He has a crush on Katniss, which he says outright in the second book. The survivors of District Twelve, after it is attacked at the end of Catching Fire, are survivors only because he saved them. He's part of the Star Sqaud in Mockingjay and fights hard to overthrow the Capitol. Gale is captured by the Capitol soon before the rebellion ends and the Capitol surrenders. He hates the Capitol and doesn't believe any atrocity beneath them. He's fierce, unrelenting, and so passionate about the rebellion that he hates even the peaceful citizens of the Capitol.
At the end of Mockingjay, he becomes a police officer in District Two without saying goodbye to Katniss. He simply disappears out of the narrative after he meets Katniss briefly before the public execution of Snow (just before the twist in the tale).

He scored 12, tying with Harry in fifth place. In the beginning of the polls, he was left alone- no points added or removed, until one voter took away a point. This was followed by two positive points, one negative, and another two positive points. This means only six people voted for or against Gale- four liked him, the other two didn't. 
Six people didn't vote Gale, which either means that they hadn't read the book or they didn't have a opinion of him. Four liked him. They may have liked the fact that he fought fiercely, or his liking for Katniss, or his role in the rebellion. He does have flaws, which makes him realistic. Two voters didn't like Gale (one asked if he could deduct two points. I flatly refused. That was against the rules). They may have thought he was going overboard with the rebellion, or they may not have liked his sudden disappearance from the story. One told me that he considered Gale to be too protective of Katniss.

Peeta the painter. The baker's son, the one who gave a starving Katniss bread when both were eleven, so he's referred to as the 'boy with the bread' throughout the series. He's a talented artist, who paints really good pictures. And as Katniss says, he doesn't need a brush and paint- he does just as well with words. He's chosen for the Seventy-fourth Hunger Games and plays a huge role in getting himself and Katniss an advantage with his 'star-crossed lovers' act. In his second Games, when he finds that both he and Katniss are in danger because of the berries, he elaborates on the act, trying to make it clear that he and Katniss actually are in love. However, he does rebel- made clear by the painting of Rue in his private training session. He is captured by the Capitol in Catching Fire when the Games end because some tributes (including Katniss) are pulled out by the rebel forces of District Thirteen.
He is tortured by the Capitol before he is rescued in Mockingjay, when the rebels discover that his memories have been tampered with. Prim helps to heal him. He is sent to the Star Squad by Coin and survives the rebellion. After Coin's assasination (the twist in the tale!), Peeta stops Katniss from biting the nightlock pill. In the epilogue, fifteen or twenty years later, he marries Katniss, and they have two kids.

Peeta nearly ended up being the least popular boy character, escaping by the virtue of one point. The voters obviously aren't huge fans of his. Why?
Haymitch repeatedly tells Katniss, "He's too good for you," to which she says, "I know." (What sort of a reply is that?!) He's fierce, but sensitive, strong, considerate, self-punishing, talented, protective...the list goes on, and he can be summarized as 'good', according to his mentor. 'Too good'. That's probably why the voters don't like him. Except, maybe, for the part when his memories are changed in Mockingjay so he's unforgiving and cold.The only flaw mentioned is his inability to be quiet while hunting. That's about it. And therefore, it turns many voters against him. He ended up with 6 points.

And finally, I present to you...KATNISS, the girl on fire. Katniss Everdeen- hunter, singer, tribute, victor, Mockingjay, rebel, archer, and youth icon.
When twelve-year-old Primrose Everdeen is selected for the Hunger Games, her sister Katniss can't believe it. She volunteers to take Prim's place in the Games, though it almost certainly means death. She soon realizes, though, that with her amazing stylist Cinna, her fellow tribute Peeta, her killer attitude, and the eleven she scored in her training session, she has a huge advantage. But when she holds out the berries...she seals her fate. Unknown to her, rebel leaders have marked her as the face of the future rebellion- the Mockingjay, after her symbol.
Katniss is determined, impulsive, suspicious, fierce and quick-tempered. She's a good hunter with an amazing voice. She knows how to keep herself alive -mostly- and she can climb a tree faster and higher than any other tribute.
So why did she score so low? She was the second least popular girl character, though she scored higher than Peeta.
What happened? She's the protagonist of a bestselling trilogy. She's portrayed by a famous actress in the movie adaptation. She's fierce, she's a survivor (as Peeta's mom puts it), and she's rebellious.

Let's also mention that she can be insensitive and distrustful- she doesn't even trust Peeta for quite a long time. She doesn't have much respect for anyone (except maybe Cinna and sometimes Gale). She also is very judgemental- she doesn't trust Peeta for a long time, then likes him, then hates him when he's cold towards her. She's rash- I mean, look at the berries, the cause of the whole problem. She blames Gale for not telling her things ("It's just what you said. And I totally agree that you should be the accessible one," says Katniss- more or less- in Mockingjay). And coming to the parts where she's in love- assuming that she has fallen in love- she can't decide who she's in love with. Gale or Peeta? Peeta or Gale?

Maybe it's not such a surprise that she scored 8 points. There are definitely quite a few negative aspects to her character.

And that brings us to the end of the list.
Next up on Cartwheels in the Rain- the performance of Rick Riordan's characters in the polls.




Saturday, 7 September 2013

HP's Representatives at the Polls

(WARNING: If you have not read all the Harry Potter books, this post contains spoilers. And I will not give spoiler alerts.)

I posted the results of a survey I did recently. And if you take a look at it, you can see that Rick Riordan's characters walked off with the top honours in both categories. However, two Rick Riordan characters also ended up labelled the "LEAST POPULAR".
What happened to Harry Potter and gang?


Luna came third in the girls' category, closely followed by Hermione in fourth place (tying with Rue from The Hunger Games). Ron came third in the boys' category and Harry came fifth (tying with Gale from The Hunger Games).

I'll start with Luna. Luna Lovegood is the Ravenclaw girl who's smart, but apparently slightly nuts. In the sixth book, it's revealed that she saw her mother die when she was nine. That may have something to do with it. Of course, it could be that she's simply absentminded (or a misunderstood genius. Remember, she's in Ravenclaw). Her father also is kind of weird, wearing a strange symbol (which turns out to be central to the story of the seventh book).

However, Luna is a member of the DA and part of the group that breaks into the Ministry of Magic in the fifth book. In the seventh book, she is part of the new trio that keeps the DA alive (along with Ginny Weasley and Neville Longbottom).
Knowing my classmates (the kids who voted), they like people who stray off the beaten track, and they like fighters. Luna is both. True, she's more strange than fierce, but the point is that she actively opposes the Death Eaters.
So maybe it's not so surprising that she came third (with 14 points). Strange and rebellious is a good combination. Not too perfect. There were people who didn't know her and there was one who thinks she's psycho. The two who came first apparently were more well-known in my class. I think Evanna Lynch did a good job portraying Luna, and that may have helped.

Next comes Hermione. Hermione Granger is Muggle-born and the top student of their class. She more or less memorizes the textbooks. She is one of the main protagonists, helps start the DA (she and Ron actually come up with the idea), she breaks into the Ministry and Gringotts, she's with Harry on his Horcrux-destroying trip in his bunked seventh year up to the point when they return to the castle, and she basically is very involved in the story.

Why did she score less than Luna? Maybe some voters thought she was too perfect. Maybe some thought she was such a complicated character that they didn't know what to think (more likely). Some hadn't read the series so they only voted on the characters they knew.
Some voters deducted points from Hermione, who ended up with 13 points. I'm guessing they thought Hermione was too perfect, even though she is a very realistic character. I would've thought Emma Watson may have boosted Hermione's popularity, but apparently she didn't.

Now let's see how Ron did. Ron Weasley is the second-last of seven kids, and is preceded at Hogwarts by not only his parents, but his older brothers. With six siblings preceding him at Hogwarts, he's under pressure to prove himself (as it shows in the Mirror of Erised in the first book). He becomes Harry's best friend, helps him figure out the wizarding world, and is part of most of the great Harry Potter's adventures. He's scared of spiders and not exactly the class topper (his girlfriend takes care of that). However, he's a good Quidditch player and a very good chess player (proven in the first book).

He scored more than any other Harry Potter character in the polls (he ended with 16 points). Why? Many readers can probably relate to him, considering his fear and the need to show himself as an individual. Nobody voted negatively for Ron. Did Rupert Grint have anything to do with it?

And at last I come to Harry. Harry Potter, the Boy Who Lived, the one who finally killed He Who Must Not Be Named, the hero of the prophecy, the owner of all three Deathly Hallows, the one who scored less than any other character from the series named after himself. Right.
Harry is the only child of Lily and James Potter and he's godson to Sirius Black (Lily, James, and Sirius all were members of the original Order of the Phoenix). He's the sworn enemy of Tom Marvolo Riddle a.k.a. Lord Voldemort. He's a Parselmouth in Gryffindor, the youngest Seeker in a century, the guy with the lightning scar, and a celebrity since the incident that made him an orphan.

In nearly every book, there will be someone with him up to the climax, when he will go on alone, fight, and win. He shows concern for his friends, but seems as if he underestimates their capabilities. He tells his friends that he's going to destroy Horcruxes, but doesn't ask them for help, even though they are talented and would be good people to have with him. If he hadn't had the backing of so many people, he would've died. As it is, a lot of people did die, supporting him. Mad-Eye, Fred, Tonks, Remus, Sirius...all huge losses.
Harry ended up with 12 points. He's the hero of a bestselling fantasy series. What happened?
The voters may have thought that he was an overacheiver and therefore boring, or maybe they weren't sure what they thought about him. Maybe they didn't like the way he underestimates people, including himself. Only they know. I thought Daniel Radcliffe was considered cool in my class. Apparently his portrayal of Harry didn't help the actual character much.

So the HP-related questions have been partly answered. What about the four characters from The Hunger Games? They will be discussed next on Cartwheels in the Rain.





Saturday, 3 August 2013

Polls in School

I'm a member of a site called Goodreads, and I often browse the discussions on it. I found a really interesting one. Ten girl characters from popular Young Adult books were listed and given 15 points each. People would post comments (or messages), adding 1 point to characters they liked, removing 1 point from characters they didn't and leaving those they didn't know or didn't have an opinion on.

I really liked the idea and set up my own version in my class. I chose 8 female characters and 8 male characters from 4 Young Adult fiction series, with the help of four of my classmates and gave each character 10 points. I opened the polls on Monday and Tuesday.
12 kids voted.
The characters were:

  • Percy, Annabeth, and Clarisse from Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan
  • Leo, Jason, Frank, Hazel, and Reyna from The Heroes of Olympus by Rick Riordan
  • Harry, Ron, Hermione, and Luna from Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
  • Katniss, Peeta, Gale, and Rue from The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  • I can't describe the characters in a few sentences so I'm not going to try.


I got some interesting results.
The most popular girl character was Annabeth from Percy Jackson and the Olympians.
The runner-up in the girls category was Hazel from The Heroes of Olympus.
The least popular girl character was Reyna from The Heroes of Olympus.
The girl who narrowly escaped being the least popular (by 2 points) was Katniss from The Hunger Games.

The most popular boy character was Leo from The Heroes of Olympus.
The runner-up in the boys category was Percy from Percy Jackson and the Olympians.
The least popular boy character was Jason from The Heroes of Olympus.
The boy who narrowly escaped being the least popular (by 1 point!) was Peeta, from The Hunger Games.

I came home on Tuesday, excited, and made charts showing the results.
The charts:



(I know it's sticking out of the post margins, but otherwise you couldn't see it.)

Any surprises? For me:
-Katniss and Peeta scored really low.
-Reyna and Jason got the same.
-The difference between the highest (Leo) and lowest (Jason) in the boys' category is 15 points...and in the books, they're best friends.

I was expecting Leo to win, Percy to come second, and Jason to score low in the boys' category. No offence to Jason fans, but I knew my class has a low opinion of him. For girls, I was guessing that Annabeth and Hazel would do pretty well (they came first and second, respectively).

But for the other characters...why did Katniss score so low? Why did Peeta score so low? Why was Ron apparently more popular than Harry? How come Reyna was so unpopular, nobody voted positively for her? Why is it that in a pair of best friends, one was super-popular and the other was the opposite? And this is intriguing, because in the books, Leo, who won the boys category in my poll, is the 'seventh wheel' and Jason, who lost to every other boy character, is the 'hero' type.

Yes, lots of questions to be answered. They will be answered next time on...
Cartwheels in the Rain!



Sunday, 21 July 2013

Shadow Spinner

Shadow Spinner, by Suzanne Fletcher, is one of my favourite books. Below, is the story. In italics, I explain the story of the 1001 nights, which, if you know it, makes the book more enjoyable.

Title: Shadow Spinner
Author: Susan Fletcher                                                




A king called Shahryar was happily married, until he discovered that his wife was in love with someone else. In a fit of rage, he executed both his wife and her lover. He was convinced that he could never trust a woman again.
Apparently kings weren't supposed to not have a wife. Or maybe Shahryar was slightly mad. Whatever the reason, Shahryar ordered his Vizier to find him a bride. He married her in the evening and executed her the next day at dawn. This went on and on, and the people developed grudges against both the king and the Vizier, especially against the Vizier- because he himself had two daughters, Shahrazad and Dunyazad.
One day Shahrazad volunteered to be the doomed bride. The night before the execution, she asked if she could tell her sister a story. Shahryar said yes. Dunyazad came and Shahrazad began to tell a story. She stopped at a particularly interesting part just at dawn. The king put off the execution, wondering how the story ended. That night, she wove in another story, left off at an interesting part, and escaped execution again. It went on and on, until, after 1001 nights, Shahryar had softened, and Shahrazad was safe.

This story is set during the dangerous time in the kingdom of Shahryar when Shahrazad was still telling stories.
It is told by Marjan, a crippled orphan who, once her mother died, was sold by her stepfather as a slave. She has a bad past...her mother crippled her before committing suicide, and Marjan has a hard time coping with the fact.
But Marjan is treated very well by her owners, who consider her as family. Marjan loves telling stories and Queen Sharazad is her idol.
One day, selling trifles in the harem, Marjan begins to tell the children there a story. She has just gotten the children to laugh when she notices an older girl listening to the story too...
The girl is Dunyazad, Sharazad's younger sister. Dunyazad takes Marjan to the queen.
Sharazad is exhausted and running out of stories after almost three years of nighttime storytelling. So when Marjan tells one that she's never heard, she's immediately interested. The next day, Marjan is bought by Sharazad and comes to live in the harem.

Sharazad tells Shahryar the story. It turns out to be one of his childhood favourites and he asks for the sequel. Sharazad tells him she knows it, but in reality, neither she nor Marjan knows. She has to get the story, for fear of the king.
Marjan is now on a mission to find the storyteller from whom she heard the tale, and get the sequel in just a few days. In the event that she doesn't...Sharazad will die and the killings will start again.

But Marjan is a member of the harem. She can't go outside at all. In order to find the storyteller, she has to sneak out without getting caught by the guards. And that's not the only obstacle in her way.

The king's mother, the Khatun, is suspicious. She loves her son and doesn't trust either Shahrazad or her crippled servant. She's very powerful, with great influence over the king. She has spies. She suspects that Marjan may be helping Shahrazad to meet a lover. And that's how the whole drama started, right? With the queen having a lover...

Marjan has to get the story. The stakes are too high. The fate of the city and the eligible unmarried girls in it rest on Marjan's shoulders. Sharazad must soften the hardened heart of the king. If only Marjan could soften the hardened corner of her own heart...
Will she manage to get the story? Will she accept her mother's actions and death?
Will the killings finally stop?

I leave you to read the book and find out.


Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Weird Word

Here's a weird-sounding word: zakuska!
It means hors d'oeuvres, or appetizers.

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Summer?!

Summertime.
People, please do not completely fall for the projected images of summer i.e:
  • Swimming a lot
  • Being carefree
  • Relaxing vacation
There are others, but I'm focusing on these right now.
REALITY CHECK! ALL SCHOOLKIDS, ATTENTION PLEASE!
Summer also means:
  • Holiday homework (mainly for students grades 5 and up)
  • Well, your parents may not get long leave...
  • If you're not out of town the WHOLE vacation, beware...it is crazy hot outside and the chances of you being allowed outside in the morning or afternoon are quite slim
So. What exactly are you going to DO?
Especially holiday homework. I mean, seriously, how many projects and worksheets have you been given to be submitted (completed, I mean) at the end of summer?
I'm convinced that at least 75%, though it's probably more like all, of the kids in my class are groaning about holiday homework. I also think that teachers are dreading correcting, roughly, fifty projects or worksheets from each grade they teach. If not more.

Look, I'm not saying summer's a terrible time..  It's when you're supposed to have a break...but how is it a break if you've got assignments to bother you? Do I sound irritated? Probably because I am.
This is something you've probably heard at least twenty times before, but try to get your holiday homework finished ASAP. It's going to be hard...believe me, it's taking me about a week to convince myself to start on my assignments.

All that said, good luck.
And have a great time!
                                                     
                                                    

Sunday, 10 February 2013

Quotes

Here are some quotes I like. I got these quotes from goodreads

'Common sense is not so common.'
                                                          -Voltaire

'Just because we've never done it doesn't mean we can't do it.'
                                                          -Eva Ibbotson in The Dragonfly Pool

'We have no water and still less soap. We have no city, but lots of hope.'
                                                          -Mary Pope Osborne in Earthquake in the Early Morning

'I solemnly swear that I am up to no good.'
                                                          -J.K. Rowling in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

'An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.'
                                                         -Mahatma Gandhi

'You cannot stop the birds of sorrow from flying over your head, but you can stop them nesting in your hair.'
                                                         -Eva Ibbotson in The Dragonfly Pool

'"My truffles? You took them? That's just mean!"'
                                                        -Eoin Colfer in Artemis Fowl: The Opal Deception

If you like these quotes and want to find more, you can do one of the following:

1.)Read the books I mentioned or others
2.)Search the site I mentioned at the beginning of this post. (It's a hyperlink. If you click on it and get to the page, scroll down. There are several sections, and one of them is 'Quotes'. Underneath, it says, 'More quotes'. Click on that and enjoy yourself)

You can choose which option you'd like to follow. I think you'll come across some quotes you can't help liking!