The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (3/5)
This is a prequel novel to the Hunger Games trilogy, taking place 64 years before the first novel. It's the 10th Annual Hunger Games, and Penam is still recovering from the Dark Days, with the novel focusing on a teenage Snow.
I'll say out and front that this is my least favourite HG book, but that's not to say the book is bad or anything. It certainly does some things very well. So on that note:
THE GOOD
What I like about Ballad is its tone and atmosphere - really captures the sense that this is after a war, that life isn't particuarly good for anyone (including those in the Capitol), and it's a case of moral ambiuity, but seen through Snow's eyes. E.g. we hear how it was the districts that started the war, but I'm not sure how unbaised a source Snow is. It has some terrific characters as well, and delves into the origins of the games. There's a sense that Penam is at a crossroads at this point in time, that hypothetically, the Capitol could have ended the Hunger Games here and now, and things would have worked out better down the line. Instead, we see how in the midst of these 'proto-games,' the seeds are being set for how they function by the timeframe of the original trilogy. At this point, no-one really likes them, not even the Capitol's population, but there's efforts being made to shift them into entertainment. Also, the reveal of who actually came up with the games, how, and why, and who implemented it is a plot twist that's not exactly spine-tingling, but it's a revelation that hits hard.
Also, credit in that while this isn't a philosophical treatise or anything, a lot of time is dedicated to discussions about the nature of control and war and whatnot. While weaker than its counterparts, the novel's more mature overall, and frankly, I prefer Snow to Katniss, by virtue of having more of a personality.
THE BAD
The book spends an inordinate amount of time on the titular Hunger Games itself, and I'm really not interested in that. I've read two Hunger Games events already, I don't need a third, especially one that's toned down. That it's toned down and miserable for everyone is the point, but it doesn't help the reading in of itself. As mentioned above, I like how this functions from a worldbuilding and thematic standpoint, I just didn't enjoy it from a plot standpoint. Also, Lucy Gray, and her 'thing' with Snow. I didn't buy it for a second, and I could swear that there'd be a reveal that she was faking it, but no, she's genuinely in love with him, and only falls out of love when he lets slip about his murder count at the very end. A revelation that comes off as forced. Also, that she's from District 12 does have similarities with Katniss, and that the games have to be wiped from video due to certain circumstances feels like a forced revelation to account for the fact that originally, Haymitch was the only known District 12 victor before Katniss.
There's also an inordinate amount of time spent on describing food. Lots of food. I'm not sure why. It's stressed that rationing sucks, and how when the Capitol was besieged people turned to cannibalism, but why all this damn food?
So, yeah. Mixed bag, but still had positives.