The Giver

The Giver is a 1993 American young adult
dystopian novel by Lois Lowry. It is set in a society which at first appears to
be utopian but is revealed to be dystopian as the story progresses. The novel
follows a 12-year-old boy named Jonas. The society has eliminated pain and
strife by converting to "Sameness", a plan that has also eradicated
emotional depth from their lives. Jonas is selected to inherit the position of
Receiver of Memory, the person who stores all the past memories of the time before
Sameness, as there may be times where one must draw upon the wisdom gained from
history to aid the community's decision making. Jonas struggles with concepts
of all the new emotions and things introduced to him: whether they are
inherently good, evil, or in between, and whether it is even possible to have
one without the other. The Community lacks any color, memory, climate, or
terrain, all in an effort to preserve structure, order, and a true sense of
equality beyond personal individuality.
Plot
Jonas, a 12-year-old boy, lives in a
Community isolated from all except a few similar towns, where everyone from
small infants to the Chief Elder has an assigned role. With the annual Ceremony
of Twelve upcoming, he is nervous, for there he will be assigned his life's
work. He seeks reassurance from his father, a Nurturer (who cares for the new
babies, who are genetically engineered and so Jonas's parents are not
biologically related to him) and his mother, an official in the Department of
Justice, and is told the Elders, who assign the children their careers, are
always right.
The day finally arrives, and Jonas is
assembled with his classmates in order of date of birth. All of the Community
is present, and the Chief Elder presides. Jonas is stunned when his turn is
passed by, and he is increasingly conspicuous and agonized until he is alone.
The Chief Elder then explains that Jonas has not been given a normal
assignment, but instead has been selected as the next Receiver of Memory, to be
trained by the current one, who sits among the Elders, staring at Jonas, and
who shares with the boy unusual pale eyes. The position of Receiver has high
status, and Jonas quickly finds himself growing distant from his classmates,
including his close friends Asher and Fiona. The rules Jonas receive further
separate him, as they allow him no time to play with his friends. They also
allow him to lie and withhold his feelings from his family, something generally
not allowed in the regimented Community.
Once he begins it, Jonas's training makes
clear his uniqueness, for the Receiver of Memory is just that—a person who
bears the burden of the memories from all of history, and who is the only one
allowed access to books beyond schoolbooks, and the rulebook issued to every
household. The current Receiver, who asks Jonas to call him the Giver, begins
the process of transferring those memories to Jonas, for the ordinary person in
the Community knows nothing of the past. These memories, and being the only
Community member allowed access to books about the past, give the Receiver
perspective to advise the Council of Elders. The first memory is of sliding
down a snow-covered hill on a sled, pleasantness made shocking by the fact that
Jonas has never seen a sled, or snow, or a hill for even the memory of these
things has been given up to assure security and conformity (called Sameness).
Even color has been surrendered, and the Giver shows Jonas a rainbow. Less
pleasantly, he gives Jonas memories of hunger and war, things alien to the boy.
Hanging over Jonas's training is the fact that the Giver once before had an apprentice,
named Rosemary, but the boy finds his parents and the Giver reluctant to
discuss what happened to her.
Jonas's father is concerned about an infant
at the Nurturing Center who is failing to thrive, and has received special
permission to bring him home at night. The baby's name will be Gabriel if he
grows strong enough to be assigned to a family. He has pale eyes, like Jonas
and the Giver, and Jonas becomes attached to him, especially when Jonas finds
that he is capable of being given memories. If Gabriel does not increase in
strength, he will be "released from the Community," also in common
speech termed being taken Elsewhere. This has happened to an off-course air
pilot, to chronic rule breakers, to elderly people, and to the apprentice
Rosemary. After Jonas casually speculates as to life in Elsewhere, the Giver
educates him by showing the boy hidden-camera video of Jonas's father doing his
job: as two identical community members cannot be allowed, Jonas's father
releases the smaller of identical twin newborns by injecting the baby with
poison before putting the body in a trash chute. There is no Elsewhere for
those not wanted by the Community, those said to have been "released"
have been killed.
Since he considers his father a murderer,
Jonas initially refuses to return home, but the Giver convinces him that
without the memories, the people of the Community cannot know that what they
have been trained to do is wrong. Rosemary had been unable to endure the darker
memories of the past and had chosen release, injecting the poison into her own
body. Together, Jonas and the Giver come to the understanding that the time for
change is now, that the Community has lost its way and must have its memories
returned. The only way to make this happen is if Jonas leaves the Community, at
which time the memories he has been given will flood back into the people, as
did the relatively few memories Rosemary had been given. Jonas wants the Giver
to escape with him, but the Giver insists that he will be needed to help the
people manage the memories, or they will destroy themselves. Once the Community
is re-established along new lines, the Giver plans to join his daughter,
Rosemary, in death.
The Giver devises a plot in which Jonas
will escape beyond the boundaries of the Communities. The Giver will make it
appear as if Jonas drowned in the river so that the search for him will be
limited. The plan is scuttled when Jonas learns that Gabriel will be
"released" the following morning, and he feels he has no choice but
to escape with the infant. Their escape is fraught with danger, and the two are
near death from cold and starvation when they reach the border of what Jonas
believes must be Elsewhere. Using his ability to "see beyond," a gift
that he does not quite understand, he finds a sled waiting for him at the top
of a snowy hill. He and Gabriel ride the sled down towards a house filled with
colored lights and warmth and love and a Christmas tree, and for the first time
he hears something he believes must be music. The ending is ambiguous, with
Jonas depicted as experiencing symptoms of hypothermia. This leaves his and
Gabriel's future unresolved. However, their fate is revealed in Gathering Blue
and in Messenger, companion novels written much later.
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