I really liked hearing about the 'sameness' in this book, it reminded me a lot of a Stedford type story (which I guess would be a Utopia of sorts). I also really liked the description of the different ages receiving items/privileges as the grow up. I feel that the whole 12 years old and getting a job thing was a little unrealistic. They made them seem much more mature for 12 year-old kids. I did like that it had a nice depth to it without being pompous or ridiculous. I didn't really get the whole no color thing. I know that they said it was because there was no sun, but if that means no color then Jonas wouldn't be able to see color either. I liked hearing about the different jobs and things, and the rules. The children rule reminded me a lot of China with it's restrictions. It wasn't the best book I've ever read but it wasn't bad. I own the second book in this series and I'll most likely read it (maybe not this month, but at some point). Overall I liked it, and might recommend it to certain people.
Imagine a world with no pain, no color, no emotion. This is the world of Lois Lowry's the Giver. Jonas is now twelve, the age where he will choose his life's occupation and will train privately away from his fellow classmates. But when Jonas is skipped over in the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas and his family become worried. The Chief Elder calls Jonas into a private meeting to inform him that he's been chosen to be the Receiver of Memory, a mysterious and lonely charge, because of his abilities to "hear (music) and see (color) beyond."
Being the Receiver of Memory Jonas feels as if he's become a pariah among his friends. His teacher, The Giver, begins to tell him to stop taking his pills which stop the "Stirrings" (hormonal emotions). The Giver gives memories of happiness, pain, life, and color– all things forgotten by his parents, family, and friends. Jonas feels increasingly alone as the burdens of the past isolate him from his old life. Eventually, Jonas will become the Giver when the next Receiver of Memory is chosen. At each session, The Giver transmits memories of color, music, life, excruciating pain, sorrow, and a myriad of other sensations we take for granted in our society. The Giver also shows Jonas private videos revealing terrible acts such as oppression and euthanasia.What begins as a seemingly perfect world morphs into a horrifying dystopia as Jonas, and the reader, learns of the dark secrets in Jonas' society– and the only person who understands is his mentor, The Giver. However, once Jonas learns of these horrible activities, he no longer wants to be the only one who knows them (once a memory is transmitted multiple times to the Receiver of Memory, it begins to fade from the Giver's mind), so Jonas and the Giver make a plan to give memories and feeling back to the community. Style Written with rather uncomplicated words, the story seems to be an easy read, but the themes and messages are anything but. A haunting story for the ages, a book, I reread often, was originally recommended to me by a cousin of mine and I am forever indebted to her. A must read for anyone who loves dystopian fiction, Lois Lowry, or literary works.