first i giggled, then i wanted to cry

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first i giggled, then i wanted to cry
Katniss saw Mrs. Mellark hit her 11 y/o son once and was like fuck this bitch forever. And that is why Katniss Everdeen is an icon.
Can you imagine that fiddler in Mockingjay playing all the songs. They danced for hours. Every single song he could. Finally playing to his hearts content. Trying to remember each and every song for each and every member of the covey that died that was killed.
74th Games tributes fan art, but only the girls ig
Kind a combo of movie and book/my interpretations of them
Really old Haymitch doodle I did for doodle requests I will die on my solitary beer belly older haymitch hill sorry. middle school man visualized that man FAT and by god i can only visualize him with a beer belly to this day.
Rereading the hunger games for the first time since I was a kid and noticing all the little details. Like Haymitch being the #1 everlark shipper throughout the whole series, constantly reminding Katniss that she could do a lot worse than Peeta and, when she's being insensitive, telling her that Peeta would never treat her like this
Also how Gale says Katniss will pick the person she needs, the person she can't survive without, as if there's some question about it, but from the first moment they met, Katniss was needing Peeta for her survival whereas Gale was just someone to talk to and hunt with. A welcome presence, yes, but not the boy with the bread who kept her going, giving her food and hope when she needed it most.
And how she tells Finnick that everyone else knows her secrets before her, and, yes, that statement applies to the plan in the arena later on, with everyone knowing about it and keeping it a secret from her and Peeta... But it also is reflected in how, after seeing her feral reaction to Peeta hitting the forcefield in the arena, Finnick realizes before even she does that she's in love with Peeta.
And how Peeta could remember Katniss's favorite color (and her favorite soup!) when he couldn't even remember his OWN
Not to mention how Peeta was literally brainwashed into fearing and wanting to kill Katniss... but after the SLIGHTEST sign of warmth and care from her, despite the fact that he was literally being sleeper-agent-activated to attack her with the lizard-mutts, he immediately overcame it and told her to run. Just like how he warned her earlier that the bombs were coming for 13, knowing he'd be tortured for it. Because that's what they do - they keep each other alive. And deep in his bones, despite everything the capitol has put him through, he is always going to push through for her, come back to her, STAY WITH HER.
Best YA love story of all time, and it's not even close.
pov hayffie
Lucy Gray Baird shows that survival does not have to come at the expense of morality.
Throughout TBOSAS, she is clever, adaptable, and deeply strategic, constantly reading the people around her and adjusting her behavior to stay alive in a world designed to exploit her. She shows that she will do whatever it takes to survive, even if it means killing her fellow tributes, Sejanus, or Mayfair.
Even as she performs, manipulates perceptions, and makes difficult choices, she consistently holds onto a personal moral compass. She values loyalty, resists cruelty for cruelty’s sake, and shows empathy toward others who are vulnerable, refusing to fully surrender her humanity to the Capitol’s rules.
Lucy Gray’s survivalist instinct is not a moral compromise. Her arc proves that one can be both a survivalist and a principled person at the same time.
On the other hand, Coriolanus mistakes survival for power, believing that staying safe means controlling others at all costs and always having the upper hand. Where Lucy Gray adapts in order to live while preserving her values, he equates self-preservation with dominance and views morality as a weakness rather than a choice. He cannot grasp that looking out for oneself does not require abandoning empathy or fairness, and instead assumes that cruelty and manipulation are necessary tools for survival. This misunderstanding leads him to see the world as a constant threat to be conquered, rather than a place where intelligence, morals, and empathy for your fellow man can coexist with survival.
These opposing views on survival are what make Snowbaird such a compelling and complex dynamic to dissect. Lucy Gray’s belief that survival can coexist with morality directly challenges Coriolanus’s conviction that power and control are the only safeguards against chaos, creating a fundamental ideological rift between them.
Their interactions are charged not just with attraction and romance, but with a deeper philosophical conflict about what it means to endure in a cruel world.
What ultimately makes their story a tragedy is not a lack of compatibility, but the way their compatibility is undermined by Coriolanus’s choices—especially his decision to lie about killing Sejanus. Lucy Gray has already shown that she understands morally complicated actions taken in the name of survival, and had Coriolanus been honest, she likely would have grasped the fear and the thought behind his decision.
Their shared intelligence, emotional attunement, and ability to read one another mean that truth could have led to understanding and a deeper bond.
Instead, the lie confirms Lucy Gray’s deepest concern—that Coriolanus prioritizes self-preservation and power over trust—turning what could have been mutual understanding into suspicion, and transforming a potentially enduring relationship a tragedy that effects generations.
Overall, in canon, Lucy Gray exposes the possibility of a different path, one that Peeta and to some extent, Katniss, ultimately takes later on in the trilogy—a path rooted in self preservation but with the belief that people are ultimately good—while Coriolanus both desires and resents that. He spends his whole life trying to disprove that theory and to prove that he made the right decision by shooting at the only girl he ever allowed himself to love.
This tension transforms Snowbaird’s relationship into more than just a dysfunctional romance; the competing philosophical worldviews that the Lucy Gray and Coriolanus represent ripples through the entire series.
Snowbaird is endlessly fascinating to analyze and I do not understand why it has such a bad rep in the fandom. It is so much more than an example of why Snow was always evil, which the way people on the clock app treat it.