March 18th, 2025

SCHOLASTIC RELEASES NEW INTERVIEW WITH SUZANNE COLLINS, AUTHOR OF THE WORLDWIDE BESTSELLING HUNGER GAMES SERIES

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SUNRISE ON THE REAPING,

A NEW HUNGER GAMES NOVEL, ON SALE TODAY, MARCH 18, 2025

 

 

New York, NY (March 18, 2025)—Scholastic (NASDAQ: SCHL), the global children’s publishing, education and media company, today released a new interview with Suzanne Collins, author of the worldwide bestselling Hunger Games series timed to the publication of Sunrise on the Reaping, on sale today. Author Suzanne Collins spoke about the book to David Levithan, SVP, Publisher and Editorial Director at Scholastic, also one of her editors. [Please note that the interview does contain some spoilers].

 

David Levithan: After writing in Coriolanus’s voice for Ballad, it must have felt like quite a change to slip into Haymitch’s point of view. Can you talk about what it was like to be wearing his voice and how that shaped the book as a whole?

 

Suzanne Collins: After traveling with Coriolanus, who is endlessly manipulative and controlling, it was a relief to wear both Haymitch’s voice and character. He has a much greater capacity for hope and love and joy. More than Coriolanus — or Katniss, for that matter. His voice is Seam overlaid with Lenore Dove’s Covey influence. There’s far more color to his expression, more humor. Sadly, at the end of the book you see his concentrated effort to strip all that away, so by the time you reach the trilogy, his language has lost the musicality of his youth. A combination of his desperation to forget combined with years of Capitol TV erase it. I like to think in his remaining years after the war, he reclaims it. You can hear it coming back in the epilogue.

 

David Levithan: It is a particular challenge to start a novel when you and most of its future readers already know its ending. 

 

Suzanne Collins:  It’s another way to approach a story, but it has its advantages. If you look at Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, we learn in the prologue  that the lovers will die. So you’re really not focused on what’s going to happen, but on how or why it happens. In the same way, you know Haymitch becomes a victor and Snow kills his loved ones, but you don’t know the events that lead to these ends. How? Why? Where? What? Who? You have to read the book to find out.

 

David Levithan:  In some of our initial conversations about the book, we talked about whether it would be written in the voice of the older Haymitch looking back or the younger Haymitch processing it as he experienced it. What led you to decide to take the approach you ultimately did?

 

Suzanne Collins: I played around with it both ways, but I found that younger Haymitch speaks directly to the YA audience the best. An older person reflecting back on their youth or shifting into a child’s perspective is harder to pull off. Good work, Harper Lee!

 

David Levithan: How do you feel spending so much time in younger Haymitch’s shoes has changed your understanding of the Haymitch we see in the trilogy?

 

Suzanne Collins: I don’t think it changed my understanding of him — Haymitch is still Haymitch — but it gave me room to explore his earlier journey. Like his relationship to Katniss via Burdock. What it meant to take on his best friend’s child and see her through the war and become her surrogate father. It was nice to have some time with that angle.

 

David Levithan: Like the other Hunger Games books, there is a clear three-part structure in place here, with each part getting the same number of chapters. How does this structure help you shape the story?

 

Suzanne Collins:  I began as a playwright over forty years ago, and that dramatic structure became the template for the novels. Since I’ve worked with it for decades, it’s almost second nature, and that allows me to spend my energy elsewhere. This is the tenth book I’ve used this structure for, so I know certain things I want to achieve by certain points in the story. If I haven’t achieved them, something isn’t working the way I hoped, and I probably need to pause and figure out why. 

 

#END OF INTERVIEW

 

 

ABOUT SUNRISE ON THE REAPING

Sunrise on the Reaping will revisit the world of Panem twenty-four years before the events of The Hunger Games, starting on the morning of the reaping of the Fiftieth Hunger Games, also known as the Second Quarter Quell.

 

As the day dawns on the fiftieth annual Hunger Games, fear grips the districts of Panem. This year, in honor of the Quarter Quell, twice as many tributes will be taken from their homes. Back in District 12, Haymitch Abernathy is trying not to think too hard about his chances. All he cares about is making it through the day and being with the girl he loves. When Haymitch’s name is called, he can feel all his dreams break. He’s torn from his family and his love, shuttled to the Capitol with the three other District 12 tributes: a young friend who’s nearly a sister to him, a compulsive oddsmaker, and the most stuck-up girl in town. As the Games begin, Haymitch understands he’s been set up to fail. But there’s something in him that wants to fight . . . and have that fight reverberate far beyond the deadly arena.

 

Publication Date: March 18, 2025 | Scholastic Press | Ages 12 and up 

Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-5461-7146-1 | Ebook ISBN: 978-1-5461-7147-8

Audio Download ISBN: 978-1-5461-7149-2 | Library Audio Download ISBN: 978-1-5461-7150-8

Audio CD ISBN: 978-1-5461-7148-5 | Audiobook narrated by Jefferson White

 

 

ABOUT SUZANNE COLLINS AND THE HUNGER GAMES:

Bestselling author Suzanne Collins first made her mark in children’s literature with the New York Times bestselling Underland Chronicles fantasy series for middle grade readers. She continued to explore the effects of war and violence on those coming of age with The Hunger Games series. The Hunger Games (2008) was an instant bestseller, appealing to both teen readers and adults. It was called “addictive” by Stephen King in Entertainment Weekly, and “brilliantly plotted and perfectly paced” by John Green in the New York Times Book Review. The book appeared on the New York Times bestseller list for more than 260 consecutive weeks (more than five consecutive years), and the total series has been on the series bestseller list for more than 360 weeks to date. There are more than 100 million copies of all four books in the series—The Hunger Games, Catching Fire (2009), Mockingjay (2010), and The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (2020)—in print and digital formats worldwide. Foreign publishing rights for The Hunger Games have been sold in 55 languages to date. Lionsgate has successfully adapted each of these books into five feature films that collectively grossed more than $3.3 billion worldwide in theatrical ticket sales.

 

In 2010 Suzanne Collins was named to the TIME 100 list as well as the Entertainment Weekly Entertainers of the Year list; in 2011 Fast Company named her to their 100 Most Creative People in Business; and in 2016 she was presented the 2016 Authors Guild Award for Distinguished Service to the Literary Community for exemplifying the unique power of young people’s literature to change lives and to create lifelong book lovers. It was the first time the Guild presented its annual award to a YA author. The Atlantic called Hunger Games heroine Katniss Everdeen, “the most important female character in recent pop culture history,” and TIME Magazine named Katniss to its list of “The 100 Most Influential People Who Never Lived.” On The Hunger Games trilogy, The New York Times Book Review wrote, “At its best the trilogy channels the political passion of 1984, the memorable violence of A Clockwork Orange, the imaginative ambience of The Chronicles of Narnia and the detailed inventiveness of Harry Potter." The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes was published in May 2020 and debuted at #1 on the New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists. The book also was the top selling book in any category for the first half of 2020. On October 1, 2024, Scholastic published The Hunger Games Illustrated Edition, a deluxe illustrated edition of Suzanne Collins’ worldwide bestseller The Hunger Games, featuring more than thirty black-and-white illustrations by internationally acclaimed artist Nico Delort. Catching Fire: Illustrated Edition, illustrated by Nico Delort, will be published October 7, 2025.

 

More information about The Hunger Games series and images for download available HERE.

 

ABOUT SCHOLASTIC:

For more information about Scholastic, visit http://mediaroom.scholastic.com/.

 

 

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Press Contacts

Tracy van Straaten

tracy.vanstraaten@tvsmediagroup.com