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The Giver (Cliffs Notes)

The Giver (Cliffs Notes)
By Suzanne Pavlos

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Product Description

Jonas, the protagonist in Lois Lowry's novel The Giver, lives in what appears to be a safe, predictable, familiar community. Members of this utopia, which is void of disease, hunger, poverty, war, or lasting pain, have given up all emotions and memories of experience to attain Sameness and the illusion of social order. In the end, Jonas recognizes the hypocrisy on which the community is based and crafts a way to "free" everyone from this Sameness.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #253857 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-06-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 64 pages

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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

My interpretation of the ending of this novel.5
I have been teaching this novel to my 9th grade students for 4 years now. My students always interpret the ending the same way year after year. They believe that Jonas reached Elsewhere and lived the life he longed for. I do not agree. Jonas dies at the end. His life is sacrificed along with Gabriel's. God sent Jonas and Gabriel to this world to end the misery of "sameness." As Jonas moved further and further away from the community, the memories were released into the community for everyone to know. Jonas did reach elsewhere. However, "elsewhere" is heaven. This is the beautiful place that no person in his community ever had a clue existed.

My ending5
I read both books and I have an interpretation on how it ends.

The music that Jonas heard was the giver trying to transmit his farewell memory. But Jonas continued with the determination to find Elsewhere. As he slides down the hill with Gabriel in his arms he sees a light. His will to live slowly departs from his body as he walks towards the light. The light was nothing more than an illusion. He closes his eyes and fell to the ground. Holding Gabriel he transmits the thought of the joy of solitude. They became still, departing from Sameness.

A little on the down side4
I have always wondered what this book was about, and I finally found the time to read it for a LA project. The author used a lot of imagination and was very creative when she formed the perfect world that Jonas lived in. This book has some good morals behind it, but I think it is rather dull and could use more suspense. I was very disappointed with the shortness of the book and the ending. Even though I do enjoy making up endings on my own, Lois Lowry has stopped the book right at the climax. I believe that she should have elaborated and given more information that would help bring the story to a wonderful ending. Over all this book is a great book to read for pleasure.