Judul           : Catching Fire (Tersulut)
Penulis : Suzanne Collins (2009)
Alih bahasa : Hetih Rusli
Penerbit : PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama
Tahun Terbit: 2010
Penulis : Suzanne Collins (2009)
Alih bahasa : Hetih Rusli
Penerbit : PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama
Tahun Terbit: 2010
Against all odds, Katniss Everdeen has won the annual Hunger Games. She and fellow district tribute Peeta Mellark are miraculously still alive. Katniss should be relieved, happy even. After all, she has returned to her family and her longtime friend, Gale. Yet nothing is the way Katniss wishes it to be. Gale holds her at an icy distance. Peeta has turned his back on her completely. And there are whispers of a rebellion against the Capitol — a rebellion that Katniss and Peeta may have helped create.
Much to her shock, Katniss has fueled an unrest she’s afraid
 she cannot stop. And what scares her more is that she’s not entirely 
convinced she should try. As time draws near for Katniss and Peeta to 
visit the districts on the Capitol’s cruel Victory Tour, the stakes are 
higher than ever. If they can’t prove, without a shadow of a doubt, that
 they are lost in their love for each other, the consequences will be 
horrifying.
Following the dramatic conclusion of The Hunger Games, 
Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark return home as victors to District 12
 after besting the Capitol and surviving the annual Games – together. 
But Katniss’s symbolic act of defiance in the Arena has dramatic, 
unforseen consequences as she has incurred the wrath of those in power, 
earning her a visit from President Snow himself. Katniss never could 
have expected that her small challenge with a handful of berries could 
have had such a dramatic effect, but she learns from an irate President 
Snow that other districts are taking her lead as rebellion stirs in 
Panem. And unless Katniss can convince the nation that her trick in the 
Arena was the desperate act of a lovesick girl, as opposed to defiance 
to adhere to the Game’s rules, everyone Katniss holds dear will suffer 
and die. But try as Katniss might to keep her friends and loved ones 
safe, things are changing in District 12 and through the rest of Panem. 
When she and Peeta embark on their victory tour, Katniss begins to see 
how she has influenced the different districts as her trademark 
mockingjay pin becomes the symbol of the resistance – and there is 
nothing that she and Peeta can do to stem the tide of unrest. With the 
seventy-fifth anniversary of the Hunger Games looming and revolution 
sweeping across the districts, the Capitol is hungry for blood and 
vengeance, with Katniss caught in the middle of the tempest.
The overwhelmingly well-received The Hunger Games was a 
gritty thrill ride of a novel, and its unresolved ending left fans 
salivating for the sequel, anxiously awaiting what Ms. Collins had in 
store for Katniss. And, it is safe to say that Catching Fire 
delivers. Packing in all the nail-biting action from the first book, Ms.
 Collins finally separates herself from the long shadow of Koshun Takami
 and Stephen King as she ventures beyond the contained realm of the 
Arena, creating a story of larger scale with the simmering of political 
rebellion and questioning of the Capitol’s control. In Catching Fire,
 we see the ramifications of Katniss and Peeta beating the system, 
emerging from the Arena physically intact, but their actions have been a
 catalyst to a very dissatisfied, disenfranchised public. It’s in the 
reactions of the different districts, in Katniss’s reflection on her own
 actions that drive Catching Fire and take it beyond the mere 
action, noise and thunder of the first book. While the aspects of 
government and the dystopian world were touched on in The Hunger Games, Catching Fire
 takes this world of Panem and examines it much more in depth. We see 
more of the different districts through Katniss’s eyes as she travels on
 her victory tour with Peeta and Haymitch, and we see how these areas 
react to Katniss’s actions and her words. Katniss’s act of defiance 
affects even the Capitol, as some of the city-folk adopt her mockingjay 
as a fashion statement, and even begin to sympathize with the young 
heroine.
While the worldbuilding is fantastic, the plotting is similarly impeccable. The Hunger Games owed a lot of its success to its impressive pacing and action-packed plot, and readers will not be disappointed to find that Catching Fire
 lives up to all the fireworks of the first book while it simultaneously
 manages to improve on more well-rounded underlying themes (i.e. the 
effects of a rigid totalitarian style of rule, the ethics of rebellion).
 The stakes are upped in this sequel, and as a result the action holds 
much more significance. There are many twists in Catching Fire,
 and it would be remiss to spoil them – so I won’t. Suffice to say, the 
plot twists are delectable, even if they’re not entirely surprising. Ms.
 Collins writes with a flair for hard and fast SF action, but manages to
 imbue deeper meaning in each scene primarily through her understanding 
of not only the political and world-building repercussions, but also 
through her completely sympathetic characters.
In that light, the true strength of Catching Fire lies in 
its heroine. Katniss is strong, rebellious, but confused and uncertain 
all at once – and she’s undoubtably the star of this novel with her 
frank narrative voice. She’s not really sure what she wants, but she 
knows she will do anything to continue to survive and endure, and keep 
those she loves safe. A teen that has been forced through a traumatic, 
life-changing ordeal, she returns to District 12 only to find that her 
world has changed (or, rather, that her perception of her world has 
changed). Her emotions are guarded especially when it comes to her 
family and the two boys in her life – Peeta, who loves Katniss 
unconditionally and indeed tries to sacrifice his own life for her and 
her happiness, and Gale, Katniss’s longtime friend. When Katniss is 
threatened by President Snow, told that her family and friends will be 
held accountable for her actions, she finds herself torn between 
obligation and her own emotional turmoil. In Catching Fire the 
triangle between Katniss, Peeta and Gale becomes much more distinct, as 
Katniss neither wants a boyfriend nor a husband, but finds her hand 
forced to action in order to protect both Peeta and Gale from the 
Capitol’s ruthlessness. Readers will undoubtably find themselves taking 
sides – and for me, as an emotional reader, this is a no-brainer. Gale 
(who I might note was barely present at all in the first book) seems 
like a nice guy and he is undeniably in Katniss’s thoughts in Catching Fire,
 but it’s really always gonna be Peeta for me. Peeta’s devotion to 
Katniss, his ability to understand her feelings and to respect her 
choices, his resolve to do anything (and I really do mean anything, as you’ll read in Catching Fire)
 to keep her safe and whole is endearing beyond belief (Of course, Gale 
will doubtless secure his own legion of fans…but it’s really all about 
Peeta). In a young adult literary landscape that is often melodramatic 
in its romantic entanglements, Catching Fire manages to pull off compelling and believable melodrama because the stakes are already so high. Other characters from The Hunger Games
 make big appearances here, especially Haymitch, the drunken mentor from
 the first book – and easily one of my favorite characters behind 
Katniss. Ms. Collins manages to flesh out not only her main duo of 
protagonists, but gives supporting cast like Haymitch, Cinna, and Effie 
the fully dimensioned treatment – and throws in some great surprises in 
each character’s arc along the way. New characters from other districts 
also are introduced, whom we will doubtless see much more of in the 
third and final novel.

 
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