i completely understand not liking lenore dove’s character, everyone’s entitled to their own opinion but comparing a 16 year old girl who lives under an oppressive government to the actual dictator of said government who kills people for fun is a big stretch in my humble opinion.
lenore dove is seen as a “pixie dream girl” because we are seeing her from haymitch’s pov and he is very much in love with her, he oversees anything “bad” that comes with her because he lives her down to his BONES. one could argue that she’s NOT being seen as perfect by the reader because we can read between the lines and see her impulsive, teenage, rebellious antics coming out. but who can blame her? she’s been living under oppression her whole life, she’s been taught by her two folks left (out of an entire family mind you), that people from her family have died under said oppression, that they used to live an adventurous, free and happy life traveling from place to place and then found, killed and then rounded up in twelve. she was radicalized from a young age, possibly from her uncles telling her the story of lucy gray (who hurt too much to even share with haymitch)
she is a character who, if she dies, she knows she won’t leave anyone behind. she’s not the main caregiver of her house, she doesn’t hunt for her family, doesn’t bring food to the table like katniss OR gale. she’s mostly closer to sejanus when it comes to paralleling characters. they’re both hungry for justice but don’t know how to execute it that they end up putting themselves in danger. they do NOT want to put their loved ones in any danger, they want to go through everything on their own.
snow was wrong because he misunderstood both lucy grays’ character AND lenore doves’. she does not plan without haymitch because she doesn’t love him. she did all these rebellious acts without haymitch knowing because in her eyes he has a family that he is the main caregiver for, a whole life in twelve, he fits PERFECTLY in twelve, he was not someone who could risk it all like she was.
she wanted a life with haymitch and does state so in multiple parts of the book, and she does see it happening in the future. she believed that she could hide that part of hers and still somehow, somewhere in the future she could’ve helped the cause and still have her happily ever after with haymitch, because she was just that, a kid with big dreams. she didn’t realize that her playing with fire would’ve gotten her burnt because even though she’s seen many people get tortured, she always managed to slip away unscathed and at that age you think you’re invincible when that happens multiple times.
she loves haymitch so much her guilt was eating her up when he got reaped. she blamed herself nonstop she ended up doing something impulsive AGAIN and got locked up because of it. (which in the end caused her her demise) then she proceeded to lie to haymitch so he doesn’t worry about her in the arena and focuses on getting out of there alive.
the only selfish(?) thing she’s done was when she condemned him to life. (if one could even call her selfish for that). she knew he would try to follow her after death so she made him promise not to. she made him stay alive, to fulfill his promise to her.
lenore dove in my opinion is a multidimensional character that you either end up loving or hating. i loved her because she was realistic (if you manage to look between haymitch’s lovestruck glasses) their unconditional love for eachother at such a young age is just something extra for me to appreciate. his puppy love ended up becoming the small, first cobblestone in the big mountain of haymitch’s road to stopping the sunrise on the reaping.
i understand not liking the book, i just find it unfair to mis-characterize lenore dove like that. a sixteen year old is naturally flawed and has traits as impulsiveness, and naturally thinks they’re untouchable and so subjects themselves under bad conditions that get them lectured by grown ups.
I'm not comparing Lenore Dove to the dictator we see in sotr or thg triology though. I'm comparing her to Coriolanus Snow before he became the head of said fascist government. I don't think Lenore Dove is who Snow became, but I think they have the same potential to do terrible things they convince themselves are right and that they think in very similar ways. Of course, this is all speculation, but it is my reading of her.
Lenore Dove as written would still be a pixie dream girl, even if the story was from anyone elses perspective. Lenore Dove tries very hard to be a pixie dream girl- she prides herself on it in fact. Haymitch just makes it more obvious, though I hesitate to label his unhealthy obsession with her as love.
Yeah, her uncles raised her on stories of the covey but it's pretty clear Clerk Carmine and Tam Amber both are basically begging her to cool it with her antics. They may have planted the seed of Lenore Dove's rebellion, but she's the one who grew it into the all consuming, destructive torrent it became. I've seen some posts comparing her to Sejanus, and while I do think they are a stronger reading than say, comparing Lenore to Lucy Grey or Katniss, Sejanus still knew when to shut up or distance himself from his family enough that the hammer wouldn't fall on them- granted the Plinth fortune made it easier for them than it is for Tam Amber and Clerk Carmine to distance from Lenore Dove- something Lenore Dove really, genuinely never seems to care about or think about. She may not WANT to put her uncles in danger, but she does, and she does so over and over again, and then acts like they're being overbearing when they have an issue with it.
You CAN argue that Lenore Dove hid things from Haymitch to protect him because she loved him that much, just like you can just as easily argue that Snow was right, because theres nothing in the text that convinces me or SHOWS that it was out of love. I'm sorry but their big ol' 'I love you' declarations don't count, not when I'm not convinced they ever loved each other in the first place. (I believe they THINK they do but whatever that dynamic was, it wasn't love).
Sure, Lenore Dove wanted a life with Haymitch, but I think she thought she could have her cake and eat it too which absolutely isn't the case in the world she lives in. Also, believing you're invincible as a teenager in our society is pretty commonplace, but we never see ANY teenager in the original trilogy who believed that because Panem is not a nation that allows for that kind of thinking or those kinds of mistakes. Katniss is scared to mutter about starvation in the woods. Remember her mother used to be terrified of her speaking her thoughts about Panem as a child until she learned to keep her mouth shut. Panem is not forgiving, and children grow up- and more importantly wise up- pretty quick. Katniss and Gale are both aware they break the law by poaching and that technically, the law could come after them at any time, but it's a calculated risk to avoid starvation ('we both agree a bullet in the head is much quicker'). Madge probably held quiet anti Captiol sentiments passed down from Merilee because of stories about Maysilee but she wasn't stupid enough to run around graffitiing the district in Maysilee's name because she would have been jailed/assaulted/killed for it and she knows it. Yeah, Lenore Dove is a stupid kid, but one brush with the law should have made her a lot quieter and a lot more careful. Two should have gotten her killed a lot sooner than in canon. There aren't a lot of people like Lenore Dove in the district not because people disagree with her, but because people who make her mistakes don't make it far past childhood.
Lenore Dove should feel bad about Haymitch getting reaped because she is at fault for it (so is Haymitch though, he was just as much of a dumbass as she was in that scenario). It's hard to believe he's the supposed love of her life that she knows so well but she didn't think for a second he'd run to her aid when peacekeepers were getting rough with her, or that he'd be punished for it. Furthermore, were her impulsive actions actually due to her guilt or just the kind of thing she would have done anyway? I'm leaning toward the latter based on the everything we know about her. As for the prison phone call...that whole interaction was weird. Sure, maybe she wanted him to not worry about her but it's just as likely she actually thought she was getting released in the morning and Snow or the peacekeeeper Haymitch made fun of on tv gave the order to keep her there.
The only selfish thing she ever did being condemning Haymitch to life is quite a stretch given that pretty much all of her motivations seem to exist to enhance her self perception or get what she wants in some way. Honestly, the 'condemning him to life' shit is the least selfish thing she ever did, and I agree you can't really call it selfish because it stopped the active suicide risk from offing himself, even if it was in the worst way possible.
Lenore Dove is not very multidimensional, but sure, if you look you can find some substance (which, considering your meta and my answer along with the half dozen other post I've made about her, seems more than I initially thought.) That said, I don't think she's very realistic, especially not for someone raised in the world she was born in. No other District 12 character acts like her for a reason, and that reason is because they'd die. As for the romance...that's where you lose me. The book told me over and over and over that Lenore and Haymitch were 'in love' and it was never once believable. I believe they thought they were in love, but there was no real substance and no real devotion. Why are they so committed to one another? What's the foundation of their relationship? What does she even LIKE about him? I don't know because the book never showed us any of it, and it made me feel it even less. It read more as weird codependence and mutual obsession, not unconditional love. And making his dead sixteen year old girlfriend and their 'love' the reason he does anything else ever for the rest of his life? Bullshit. What about vengeance? What about the dozens of kids he mentored to their deaths? What about his fellow victors and the horrors they endured for decades as the capitol's puppets? What about the systemic injstices that ruined his and thousands of others lives? What about the family he forgot existed in favour of waxing poetic about Lenore Dove every second page? what about the myriad of other reasons and motivations for wanting the regime gone? Do they all mean nothing because he loved Lenore Dove just that much? The epilogue apparently wants us to think so, which in my opinion is the biggest tragedy of the entire book.
I'm glad you understand not liking this book. I understand liking this book. Believe it or not, I actually did like it- it was fun and it read like fanfic, which I love reading. But I stand by what I said. I didn't like Lenore Dove, nor do I think anything in my last post (or this one) is a mischaracterization of her, simply an interpretation free of rose coloured glasses. Impulsivity to the level Lenore Dove displays in Panem would be deadly (if you need proof look at Woodbine Chance's impulsive choice to flee the reaping), and she was stupid to believe otherwise. She's incredibly lucky she survived as long as she did, let alone that her biggest punishments were jail time or lectures.