The Hunger Games: what to read next

  • Adventure
  • Fantasy
  • Myths and legends
  • Science fiction
  • Thriller
  • Dystopia

If you’re a big fan of Suzanne Collins’ engrossing trilogy The Hunger Games, which other stories might you enjoy? We’ve got some ideas and would love to hear your recommendations too!

Fans of the mega blockbuster dystopian novel The Hunger Games were recently treated to Suzanne Collins’ new addition to the fictional world of Panem, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. To celebrate, we thought about what books we would read after The Hunger Games – let us know what you’d recommend!

If you’re looking for other dystopian YA…

Billed as The Hunger Games meets Jurassic Park, The Extinction Trials by S M Wilson is a heady adventure featuring a plague-ridden continent on one side and a verdant, dinosaur-filled one on the other.

Alternatively, in the eco-dystopia Jelly by Clare Rees, Martha and her friends are stuck on the back of a giant killer jellyfish, and they’re going to escape – or die trying.

Burn by Patrick Ness features a dragon that appears at a farm in 1957, at the end of the world, ready to fulfil a prophecy, and Marie Lu’s Legend series is set in a futuristic version of Los Angeles, in a world where the United States is run like a police state.

Veronica Roth’s uber-successful dystopia series Divergent is also a must-read, as is Michael Grant’s Gone, which chronicles a plague and hunger-ridden End of Days America in which teens must survive.

  • The Extinction Trials

    by S M Wilson 

    2018 11 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Fantasy
    • Thriller

    In Storm and Lincoln’s world, there are two continents… And one is inhabited by vicious, predatory dinosaurs. A tense, brutal fantasy adventure: The Hunger Games meets Jurassic Park.

  • Divergent

    by Veronica Roth 

    2011 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Coming-of-age
    • Love and romance
    • Science fiction
    • Dystopia

    Often violent and disturbing, the novel is concerned with becoming an individual, facing your fears and finding your place in the world – and there’s a teenage romance too.

  • Gone

    by Michael Grant 

    2015 11 to 14 years 

    • Science fiction
    • Thriller

    Fourteen year old Sam Templeton is having a completely normal day until his teacher disappears in the middle of a class. But he soon discovers that it isn’t only their teacher who is gone – everyone over the age of fifteen has inexplicably disappeared from the small town of Perdido Beach.

If you love action novels with strong female leads and a mythic feel…

Yoon Ha Lee’s Dragon Pearl is a multi-layered thriller that successfully and seamlessly integrates the supernatural creatures of Korean mythology. Min is a complex heroine whose personal journey takes her from timid housemaid to bold conqueror via profound self-knowledge and some fantastically imagined space tech.

Julie Kagawa’s Shadow of the Fox draws inspiration from the culture, folklore and myths of Japan with compelling female characters in a supernatural fantasy thriller. And in Nnedi Okorafor’s Sunny and the Mysteries of Osisi, set in contemporary Nigeria, Sunny is a normal girl plunged into a series of magical events.

Also check out Frances Hardinge’s Deeplight, in which readers may see political allegory in Hardinge’s story of drowned gods, myth-making and undersea mystery.

  • Dragon Pearl

    by Yoon Ha Lee 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Coming-of-age
    • Myths and legends
    • Science fiction
    • Thriller

    Science fiction meets Korean mythology as Min tries to solve the mystery of her brother’s disappearance by stowing away on a Space Forces battle cruiser. 

  • Shadow of the Fox

    by Julie Kagawa 

    2018 11 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Myths and legends

    In a land faraway, they tell of a mythical Dragon-god who appears only once every thousand years and can grant any wish. First of a trilogy of absorbing fantasy thrillers that draws inspiration from Japanese culture, myth and folklore. 

  • Sunny and the Mysteries of Osisi

    by Nnedi Okorafor 

    2018 11 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Around the world
    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Horror
    • Myths and legends
    • Thriller

    The second book of a fantasy adventure series set in contemporary Nigeria. Can Sunny and her friends use juju and natural abilities to save the Niger delta from destruction?Great for those looking for some magical escapism.

  • Deeplight

    by Frances Hardinge 

    2019 11 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Chapter books
    • Myths and legends
    • Dystopia

    Hark and his best friend Jelt spend their days on a strange island hunting for magical godware”. But everything is about to change for them in this breathtaking, richly imagined story, full of heart and soul and incredible world-building. 

For fans of The Hunger Games’ political machinations…

If you’re fascinated by the politics of The Hunger Games, you’ll love Melinda Salisbury’s State of Sorrow, in which teenager Sorrow must rule a country embroiled in a bitter war. Meanwhile, Katherine and Elizabeth Corr’s A Throne of Swans finds heroine Aderyn trying to regain her noble power of flight to protect her kingdom from the various nefarious plots at court.

In terms of contemporary politics, Sophia Thakur’s Somebody Give This Heart a Pen is a thoughtful collection of poems about what it is to be a young Black woman in the world now; Angie Thomas’ The Hate U Give is also a modern must-read, both as a comment on the #blacklivesmatter movement, and as a stonking coming of age story.

You might also enjoy Renee Watson and Ellen Hagan’s Watch Us Rise, which follows Jasmine as she starts a feminist blog; featuring a dual narrative interspersed with blog posts and poetry, it’s a timely look at how easy it can be to become desensitised to casual discrimination as well as a realistic representation of the many demands of school and home life faced by today’s young adults.

  • State of Sorrow

    by Melinda Salisbury 

    2018 11 to 14 years 

    • Coming-of-age
    • Fantasy
    • Love and romance
    • Thriller

    This is the first book in a new fantasy thriller series characterised by thwarted love, fraud, trickery and a ruthless battle for power. Startling plot twists will keep you gripped until the last page and impatient for the next instalment.

  • Somebody Give This Heart a Pen

    by Sophia Thakur 

    2019 11 to 14 years 

    • Poetry and rhyme

    An internationally acclaimed performance poet and YouTube phenomenon, Thakur writes with passion and conviction about everyday life alongside wider social issues, reminding us that they are intricately linked: the personal is political, after all.

  • The Hate U Give

    by Angie Thomas 

    2017 11 to 14 years 

    • Coming-of-age

    The Hate U Give is rightly named by many critics as one of the most important books of 2017. It’s a profound, deeply compelling modern-day classic that explores race in America.

  • Watch Us Rise

    by Renée Watson and Ellen Hagan 

    2019 11 to 14 years 

    • Coming-of-age
    • Diaries and journals

    Jasmine and her friends are fed up with casual discrimination and being pigeonholed as stereotypes. So they start a school blog addressing contemporary social and personal issues of sexism, racism and other forms of prejudice. A timely teen novel. 

If your children are still a bit too young for The Hunger Games…

Julia Green’s The House of Light is almost dystopia, but the lyrical focus on the natural world sets it apart from the crowd. At a time when so many young people are actively speaking out against government inactivity over climate change, it feels very timely, too, and shows us the power of hope and resilience.

Similarly, Sam Gayton’s The Last Zoo tackles the issue of animal extinction, and Sita Brahmachari’s Where The River Runs Gold is set in a Britain ruined by climate change. Elsewhere, FloodWorld by Tom Huddleston depicts a future flooded London, and Liz Hyder’s Bearmouth tells the story of Newt’s escape from the terrible mines he has been forced to work in from early childhood.

  • The House of Light

    by Julia Green 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Dystopia

    A wonderfully imaginative and beautifully written story about a climate change-wrecked world that feels very timely and shows us the power of hope and resilience. 

  • The Last Zoo

    by Sam Gayton 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Fantasy
    • Funny
    • Dystopia

    Pia lives on the last zoo: a floating armada that houses the strangest collection of creatures the world’s ever seen, from genies to mirror-orangutans to hummingdragons. Collectively called voilas’, they each have a special ability, and everyone hopes these will help save the world from environmental catastrophe.

  • Where the River Runs Gold

    by Sita Brahmachari 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Dystopia

    Shifa and her brother Themba live in a world destroyed by climate change, but when they’re sent away to work, they’re horrified to discover a cruel and corrupt system. Will they be able to escape and make the world a better place?

  • FloodWorld

    by Tom Huddleston 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Science fiction
    • Thriller
    • Dystopia

    When the sea level rose, a wall was built to protect London. Now Kara and Joe are stuck in the middle between the privileged few inside the wall and the ruthless Mariners out on the ocean. An action-packed, edge-of-the-seat thriller with an environmental edge. 

  • Bearmouth

    by Liz Hyder 

    2019 9 to 14 years 

    • Adventure
    • Chapter books

    Newt has been living and working in the horrendous conditions of Bearmouth mine from an early age. Any kind of way out isn’t even contemplated until Newt meets Devlin. This story is exciting, ambitious, unpredictable and breathtakingly brilliant. 

Join in!

You’ve heard our suggestions – now we would absolutely love to hear which books you would recommend to a fan of The Hunger Games! Have you read something recently that would fit the bill? Or do you know about stories that young readers moved on to after Suzanne Collins’ trilogy?

Let us know by messaging us on social media @BookTrust using the hashtag #WhatToReadAfter

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