The Giver (Cascades)

192 pages

Published March 20, 2001 by Collins Educational.

ISBN:
978-0-00-711182-4
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OCLC Number:
52349903

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4 stars (31 reviews)

Given his lifetime assignment at the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas becomes the receiver of memories shared by only one other in his community and discovers the terrible truth about the society in which he lives.

36 editions

Review of 'Giver' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Ordinarily, I’m not a huge fan of the YA Dystopian genre. Reading this story, I think I finally realised why that is: they’re all poor imitations of this one!

Just kidding. They’re actually quite different.

In most modern YA Dystopian stories, we’re told “the way things are” over a few pages, early in the story. Most of these stories are also told in the first person (often through the eyes of a teenage girl), and they’re presented in a way that intends to disgust and revolt us straight away. The situation is unequivocably, irrevocably bad, it needs to change as soon as possible, and the protagonist is going to be the one to do it.

You’re told what to think and how to feel about the state of the world.

This story’s different. It’s told in third person, and focusses on Jonas, a regular kid of approximately eleven years old …

Review of 'Giver (illustrated; Gift Edition)' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

The Giver is remarkable for well how it builds a dystopian world by not describing things. Jonas is an unreliable narrator in the manner of someone who has been gaslit, he doesn't know what he doesn't know. I'm very glad to know this has sequels.

I'm keeping my descriptions minimal because talking much at all about so short of a book would spoil major portions of it. Suffice it to say, I liked it, I'm ready to read the rest of the quartet, and it's a dystopia such that the most chilling parts of it lie in the implications of what is missing from Jonas's understanding. It doesn't rely on mystery, exactly, just that as Jonas gains some understanding of what was absent from his life, it implies even more things that he hasn't yet learned were missing.

Review of 'The Giver - Essential Modern Classics [Paperback] [Jan 01, 2011] LOIS LOWRY' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Marsha Woerner Good and interesting. Not my usual style, but my son was having trouble reading and absorbing it for school, so he would READ a chapter, DESCRIBE it to me, and then we'd LISTEN together. We then listened to it all through. The book was good on several levels. There was the story itself--the memories themselves; the family and friends. Then there were all the morals: the changing views and the slow realization that making life simple had consequences, and the consequences were involved and there were many conflicting considerations.
Then there was the end, anmost paranormal. I won't say more to avoid spoilers.
But it was good. My son even admitted that he probably would have liked it had it not been ASSIGNED!

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