(Content
taken from SparkNotes: www.sparknotes.com)
The giver is
written from the point of view of Jonas, an eleven-year-old boy
living in a futuristic society that has eliminated all pain,
fear, war, and hatred. There is no prejudice, since everyone
looks and acts basically the same, and there is very little
competition. Everyone is unfailingly polite. The society has
also eliminated choice: at age twelve every member of the
community is assigned a job based on his or her abilities and
interests. Citizens can apply for and be assigned compatible
spouses, and each couple is assigned exactly two children each.
The children are born to Birthmothers, who never see them, and
spend their first year in a Nurturing Center with other babies,
or “newchildren,” born that year. When their children are grown,
family units dissolve and adults live together with Childless
Adults until they are too old to function in the society. Then
they spend their last years being cared for in the House of the
Old until they are finally “released” from the society. In the
community, release is death, but it is never described that way;
most people think that after release, flawed newchildren and
joyful elderly people are welcomed into the vast expanse of
Elsewhere that surrounds the communities. Citizens who break
rules or fail to adapt properly to the society’s codes of
behavior are also released, though in their cases it is an
occasion of great shame. Everything is planned and organized so
that life is as convenient and pleasant as possible.
Jonas lives with his father, a Nurturer of new children, his
mother, who works at the Department of Justice, and his
seven-year-old sister Lily. At the beginning of the novel, he is
apprehensive about the upcoming Ceremony of Twelve, when he will
be given his official Assignment as a new adult member of the
community. He does not have a distinct career preference,
although he enjoys volunteering at a variety of different jobs.
Though he is a well-behaved citizen and a good student, Jonas is
different: he has pale eyes, while most people in his community
have dark eyes, and he has unusual powers of perception.
Sometimes objects “change” when he looks at them. He does not
know it yet, but he alone in his community can perceive flashes
of color; for everyone else, the world is as devoid of color as
it is of pain, hunger, and inconvenience.
At the Ceremony
of Twelve, Jonas is given the highly honored Assignment of
Receiver of Memory. The Receiver is the sole keeper of the
community’s collective memory. When the community went over to
Sameness—its painless, warless, and mostly emotionless state of
tranquility and harmony—it abandoned all memories of pain, war,
and emotion, but the memories cannot disappear totally. Someone
must keep them so that the community can avoid making the
mistakes of the past, even though no one but the Receiver can
bear the pain. Jonas receives the memories of the past, good and
bad, from the current Receiver, a wise old man who tells Jonas
to call him the Giver.
The Giver transmits memories by
placing his hands on Jonas’s bare back. The first memory he
receives is of an exhilarating sled ride. As Jonas receives
memories from the Giver—memories of pleasure and pain, of bright
colors and extreme cold and warm sun, of excitement and terror
and hunger and love—he realizes how bland and empty life in his
community really is. The memories make Jonas’s life richer and
more meaningful, and he wishes that he could give that richness
and meaning to the people he loves. But in exchange for their
peaceful existence, the people of Jonas’s community have lost
the capacity to love him back or to feel deep passion about
anything. Since they have never experienced real suffering, they
also cannot appreciate the real joy of life, and the life of
individual people seems less precious to them. In addition, no
one in Jonas’s community has ever made a choice of his or her
own. Jonas grows more and more frustrated with the members of
his community, and the Giver, who has felt the same way for many
years, encourages him. The two grow very close, like a
grandfather and a grandchild might have in the days before
Sameness, when family members stayed in contact long after their
children were grown.
Meanwhile, Jonas is helping his
family take care of a problem newchild, Gabriel, who has trouble
sleeping through the night at the Nurturing Center. Jonas helps
the child to sleep by transmitting soothing memories to him
every night, and he begins to develop a relationship with
Gabriel that mirrors the family relationships he has experienced
through the memories. When Gabriel is in danger of being
released, the Giver reveals to Jonas that release is the same as
death. Jonas’s rage and horror at this revelation inspire the
Giver to help Jonas devise a plan to change things in the
community forever. The Giver tells Jonas about the girl who had
been designated the new Receiver ten years before. She had been
the Giver’s own daughter, but the sadness of some of the
memories had been too much for her and she had asked to be
released. When she died, all of the memories she had accumulated
were released into the community, and the community members
could not handle the sudden influx of emotion and sensation. The
Giver and Jonas plan for Jonas to escape the community and to
actually enter Elsewhere. Once he has done that, his larger
supply of memories will disperse, and the Giver will help the
community to come to terms with the new feelings and thoughts,
changing the society forever.
However, Jonas is forced to
leave earlier than planned when his father tells him that
Gabriel will be released the next day. Desperate to save
Gabriel, Jonas steals his father’s bicycle and a supply of food
and sets off for Elsewhere. Gradually, he enters a landscape
full of color, animals, and changing weather, but also hunger,
danger, and exhaustion. Avoiding search planes, Jonas and
Gabriel travel for a long time until heavy snow makes bike
travel impossible. Half-frozen, but comforting Gabriel with
memories of sunshine and friendship, Jonas mounts a high hill.
There he finds a sled—the sled from his first transmitted
memory—waiting for him at the top. Jonas and Gabriel experience
a glorious downhill ride on the sled. Ahead of them, they see—or
think they see—the twinkling lights of a friendly village at
Christmas, and they hear music. Jonas is sure that someone is
waiting for them there.


