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May 05, 2012 11:50

What I've been up to (last one of these from me for a while since we're starting spring cleaning and fun things like gaming and anime fall by the wayside until we're finished):

Gaming: Working on Devil Summoner 2. Not too terribly far into it since I've been busy, but I think I'll burn through it like I did the first game once I get time to ( Read more... )

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Comments 7

ginnyseta May 5 2012, 16:20:02 UTC
I also really enjoyed the second (and third!) book more than the first! Finnick also grew on me a ton. He is def one of my fav characters.

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archica May 7 2012, 02:34:22 UTC
I've come across several reviews that said the second book was a disappointment. I feel like they didn't read the same book I did.

Finnick was so great. I like that he was layered and there was much more to him than what was on the surface.

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mariye May 5 2012, 18:15:42 UTC
Wait until you read Mockingjay. Finnick's storyline will BREAK. YOUR. HEART. Seriously. Peeta too.

By the end of the series, I really disliked Gale. Which is ironic because I thought he was great in Hunger Games and didn't seem all that bad in Catching Fire. I almost considered him an antagonist by the end,

I loved Mags, Finnick and Johanna though. All three are just awesome characters. I especially love the dynamic between Katniss and Johanna in Mockingjay.

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archica May 7 2012, 02:36:08 UTC
I accidentally spoiled myself for Finnick's ultimate fate (should probably stay away from Wikipedia until I finish book three, which I'm working on now XD). I'm undecided on Gale. I didn't like Peeta at all in book one, but in book two I thought he was great. Very sincere and intelligent.

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mariye May 7 2012, 03:35:21 UTC
Peeta's really likeable in book 3 as well. Tragic as well.

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natsufan May 20 2012, 21:56:28 UTC
I found "The Hunger Games" quite commercial and with a too-much "hollywood ending". I found Catching Fire better... And I just finished Mockingjay and consider it Literature, with a capital "L". Collins has managed the chance Rowling missed: to start a series as something commercial and just for fun and entertainment, and make the reader "graduate" into thinking deeply about serious and disturbing topics ( ... )

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