The idea for The Hunger Games famously came to Suzanne Collins as she was channel-hopping at home in Connecticut, late one evening in the mid-2000s. She found herself flicking back and forth between a reality telelvision contest and footage of the war in Iraq, musing on that uncomfortable juxtaposition, and
The Hunger Games: A quiver full of genius
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Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire'. Photo / Murray Close
That success has carried over to the box office, where the 2012 film version of the 2008 Hunger Games novel grossed almost US$700 million worldwide and made Jennifer Lawrence a megastar. Its sequel, Catching Fire, has just released, and promises to break box-office records. Collins' creation has been followed to the screen by several more adaptations of dystopian teen novels, including the best-selling Divergent trilogy by US author Veronica Roth, which also features a feisty female lead.

Without the culture and conflicts of the 2000s, The Hunger Games might never have come into being, nor have touched such a nerve with readers. Yet its origins can be found in a war fought a generation earlier. Collins father, an officer in the US Air Force, was sent to serve in Vietnam in 1968, around the time she turned 6.
"Even though my mother tried to protect us, sometimes the TV would be on, and I would see footage from the war zone," Collins has said. "I was little, but I would hear them say Vietnam, and I knew my dad was there, and it was very frightening."
The experience had such an effect on Collins that her latest book, Year Of The Jungle, is an illustrated memoir of that period aimed at readers of around the age she was when her father was away fighting overseas. Its narrator, a young schoolgirl named Suzy, is confused to hear that her father has been sent to "a place called Viet Nam" to participate in something called a war.
Collins snr returned safe, though he suffered nightmares. In the early 1970s, the air force posted him and his family to Brussels, where he would take his four children on regular and comprehensive tours of the local battlefields. Collins learned that her grandfather had been gassed during World War I, her uncle wounded by shrapnel in World War II. Her father had previously taught history to cadets at the West Point military academy. He had a gift for story telling, his daughter thought, and a sense of exactly how much a child could handle, which is quite a bit.
Collins work could, therefore, be seen as an attempt to continue her father's project, of teaching young people about the horrors of war. Her first book series, before Year Of The Jungle or The Hunger Games, was The Underland Chronicles, in which two children tumble through a vent in their basement to find a fantasy world torn apart by a conflict between species. (Though many children die in the course of The Hunger Games trilogy, the books are decidedly anti-violence, so there is an awful irony to the fact that Collins and her family live in Sandy Hook, Connecticut, where 20 children and six adults were killed during a mass shooting last December.)
Katniss Everdeen's signature skill is archery, which she has learned as a child to hunt for food for her family's table. That, too, is an echo from Collins' father, who grew up during the Depression, hunting and foraging for food that his family could not otherwise afford.
Collins' childhood was comfortable, in spite of that difficult year without her father, and by the mid-1980s she was a theatre and telecommunications student at the University of Indiana, where she met her husband, the actor Charles Cap Pryor.
After graduating, the pair moved to New York, and in 1991 Collins began her career as a children's television writer, including a stint on Clarissa Explains It All, starring Melissa Joan Hart as a feisty, precocious teenager struggling through adolescence. Though Clarissa's circumstances were somewhat less violent than Katniss', she was nonetheless a groundbreaker: the Nickelodeon network's first female protagonist.
It wasn't until after she turned 40 that Collins published her first book, inspired by a meeting with the children's writer James Proimos, who would later illustrate Year Of The Jungle. The first of five Underland Chronicles, Gregor the Overlander, was published in 2003. The series was successful, but not so successful that its author could give up her day job, so she juggled the writing of The Hunger Games with work on a Nickelodeon show for preschool children, Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!.
The Hunger Games was published in September 2008 and went on to spend 100 weeks on The New York Times best-seller list, where it was joined by Catching Fire the following year, and the final book of the trilogy, Mockingjay, in 2010. Chris Shoemaker, the president-elect of the US Young Adult Library Services Association, explains its appeal to its core audience, saying, "The Hunger Games speaks to teenagers, to that outsider feeling they have that the world is organised against them. In The Hunger Games' world, it really is organised against them.
Collins has adapted the books for the screen personally. Last year, Amazon revealed she was the best-selling Kindle author of all time. Yet she remains an elusive media presence, presumably suspicious of the sensationalism that her novels satirise. She rarely, if ever, grants on-camera interviews.
Like Katniss, she is a reluctant celebrity but, also like Katniss, an increasingly powerful one.
- Independent