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Hunger Games prequel in the works by author Suzanne Collins

'With this book, I wanted to explore the state of nature, who we are, and what we perceive is required for our survival,' says Collins

Clémence Michallon
New York
Monday 17 June 2019 09:48 EDT
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The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2 - Trailer 2

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Suzanne Collins will publish a sequel to The Hunger Games, a decade after wrapping up the original trilogy.

The novel, currently untitled, is scheduled for release on 19 May, 2020.

It will bring readers back 64 years before the beginning of the hit book series.

The author set the Hunger Games books in a post-apocalyptic dystopia where young people must fight and kill each other on live television.

Collins said in a statement that she would go back to the years following the so-called Dark Days, the failed rebellion in Panem, the North American country where the games take place.

“With this book, I wanted to explore the state of nature, who we are, and what we perceive is required for our survival,” she said.

“The reconstruction period 10 years after the war, commonly referred to as the Dark Days – as the country of Panem struggles back to its feet – provides fertile ground for characters to grapple with these questions and thereby define their views of humanity.”

The book is set well before the lifetime of heroine Katniss Everdeen, played by Jennifer Lawrence in the billion-dollar film franchise.

“Suzanne Collins is a master at combining brilliant storytelling, superb world building, breathtaking suspense, and social commentary,” Scholastic Trade Publishing president Ellie Berger said in a statement.

“We are absolutely thrilled – as both readers and publishers – to introduce the devoted fans of the series and a new audience to an entirely new perspective on this modern classic.”

The cover of a new, untitled Hunger Games novel by Suzanne Collins, which will be released on 19 May, 2020.
The cover of a new, untitled Hunger Games novel by Suzanne Collins, which will be released on 19 May, 2020. (Scholastic via AP)

Lionsgate released the four Hunger Games movies, and the studio’s vice chairman Michael Burns has suggested a prequel.

In a recent statement to The Associated Press, Lionsgate chairman Joe Drake said: “As the proud home of the Hunger Games movies, we can hardly wait for Suzanne’s next book to be published.

“We’ve been communicating with her during the writing process and we look forward to continuing to work closely with her on the movie.”

The studio did not immediately respond when asked if an agreement for film rights had already been reached.

The first three Hunger Games books – The Hunger Games, Catching Fire and Mockingjay – have sold more than 100 million copies and have been translated into more than 50 languages.

Although she was actively involved with the production of the Hunger Games films, Collins appeared to be done with the novels after the publication of Mockingjay in 2010.

She had said little about her plans in recent years, beyond telling a gathering at the 2013 BookExpo publishing convention that she was working on a new series.

Her most recent book of any kind came out in 2013: The picture story Year Of The Jungle was based on the time in Vietnam served by Collins’s father, a career air force officer.

Collins has cited her father as a reason for her lifelong studies of war, and cited both contemporary and classical culture as inspirations for The Hunger Games.

She named the country Panem as a reference to the Roman expression “panem et circenses”, meaning bread and circuses, diversions for the masses.

In a 2010 interview with the AP, she recalled watching television one night, switching channels, and becoming momentarily disoriented by going back and forth between a reality programme and the Iraq War.

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“We have so much programming coming at us all the time. Is it too much? Are we becoming desensitised to the entire experience?” she said.

“Dystopian stories are places where you can play out the scenarios in your head – your anxieties – and see what might come of them. And, hopefully, as a young person, with the possibilities of the future waiting for you, you’re thinking about how to head these things off.”

Additional reporting by agencies

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