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Critical reception from WIKI
Mockingjay has received mostly positive reviews from critics. Entertainment Weekly gave the book a B+ and said, "Collins has kicked the brutal violence up a notch in an edge-of-your-seat plot".[13] Publishers Weekly called the book "the best yet, a beautifully orchestrated and intelligent novel that succeeds on every level". The review went on to praise the "sharp social commentary and the nifty world building", as well as the "romantic intrigue" between Peeta, Katniss and Gale.[14] Kirkus Reviews gave Mockingjay a starred review, saying that the book is exactly what its fans are looking for and that "it will grab them and not let go".[15] Susan Carpenter of the Los Angeles Times compared the battlefield to Iraq and said that the book is every bit as original as the first in the series, ending the review with, "Wow".[16] The Baltimore Sun commented that the book "ends on an ostensibly happy note, but the heartbreaking effects of war and loss aren't sugar-coated", and that it will have readers thinking about the effects of war on society.[5] Katie Roiphe of The New York Times said it is "the perfect teenage story with its exquisitely refined rage against the cruel and arbitrary power of the adult world". However, she criticized that it wasn't as "impeccably plotted" as The Hunger Games.[17]更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Critical reception from WIKI
Mockingjay has received mostly positive reviews from critics. Entertainment Weekly gave the book a B+ and said, "Collins has kicked the brutal violence up a notch in an edge-of-your-seat plot".[13] Publishers Weekly called the book "the best yet, a beautifully orchestrated and intelligent novel that succeeds on every level". The review went on to praise the "sharp social commentary and the nifty world building", as well as the "romantic intrigue" between Peeta, Katniss and Gale.[14] Kirkus Reviews gave Mockingjay a starred review, saying that the book is exactly what its fans are looking for and that "it will grab them and not let go".[15] Susan Carpenter of the Los Angeles Times compared the battlefield to Iraq and said that the book is every bit as original as the first in the series, ending the review with, "Wow".[16] The Baltimore Sun commented that the book "ends on an ostensibly happy note, but the heartbreaking effects of war and loss aren't sugar-coated", and that it will have readers thinking about the effects of war on society.[5] Katie Roiphe of The New York Times said it is "the perfect teenage story with its exquisitely refined rage against the cruel and arbitrary power of the adult world". However, she criticized that it wasn't as "impeccably plotted" as The Hunger Games.[17]更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net