Wednesday, June 10, 2015

“The Fault in Our Stars” Review – Writer’s Choice

In 2014, TIME magazine recognized John Green, along with 99 others, as being one of the most influential people in the world.

One of Green’s creations that certainly helped thrust him to this spotlight was a poignant love story rolling through the ups and downs of life for two teenagers with cancer.

Published in 2012, “The Fault in Our Stars” was the fourth novel solely written by John Green.
In the story, Hazel Grace and Augustus Waters meet at a support group, and quickly grow close to each other. Hazel’s thyroid cancer has crept to her lungs, while Augustus has been robbed of a leg by osteosarcoma.

Though not without humor, this story is full of heartbreak. The main characters are relatable, as we watch Hazel fall in love with Augustus while continuing to struggle with her disease. As with Augustus’ character, the reality is that sometimes people don’t stay strong. An article from The New York Times states, “Over the course of the narrative, his appealing exterior breaks down; his flaws, fears and humiliations are exposed, yet he is all the more lovable for his frailty and heartbreaking humanity.”

John Green once said “all good American literature is always interested in people who are ambiguously heroic,” and that’s how he constructed these characters.

The article from The New York Times goes on to sum it up perfectly.

“’The Fault in Our Stars’ is all the more heart-rending for its bluntness about the medical realities of cancer. There are harrowing descriptions of pain, shame, anger and bodily fluids of every type. It is a narrative without rainbows or flamingoes; there are no magical summer snowstorms. Instead, Hazel has to lug a portable oxygen tank with her wherever she goes, and Gus has a prosthetic leg. Their friend Isaac is missing an eye and later goes blind. These unpleasant details do nothing to diminish the romance; in Green’s hands, they only make it more moving. He shows us true love — two teenagers helping and accepting each other through the most humiliating physical and emotional ordeals — and it is far more romantic than any sunset on the beach.”

When asked in an interview for Goodreads what his inspiration was for the book, Green described meeting a young girl with thyroid cancer named Esther in 2009. The impact she made on him motivated the novel.

“I knew I wanted to write a story about sick kids, but I was so angry, so furious with the world that these terrible things could happen, and they weren't even rare or uncommon, and I think in the end for the first ten years or so I never could write it because I was just too angry, and I wasn't able to capture the complexity of the world. I wanted the book to be funny. I wanted the book to be unsentimental. After meeting Esther, I felt very differently about whether a short life could be a rich life.”

In The New Yorker, it states: “Most Y.A. readers are girls, but because Green is male and his first books featured boys as protagonists his new novel seemed capable of reaching both genders. “Stars” is a love story, but Strauss-Gabel successfully pushed for a cover that did not look like a traditional Y.A. romance: no pink, no photograph of a pretty girl. Instead, the title dominates, and the background is blue.”

From this, we can derive that there is no logical reason why any respectable reader would carry this manuscript around feeling anything less than proud.

In an article about John Green previously mentioned from TIME magazine, it says “Some say that through his books, John gives a voice to teenagers. I humbly disagree. I think John hears the voices of teenagers. He acknowledges the intelligence and vulnerability that stem from those beautiful years when we are, for the first time, discovering the world and ourselves outside of our familial stories.”

That is what makes stories like “The Fault in Our Stars” so powerful.

Other works of John Green include the books “Looking for Alaska,” “Paper Towns,” and “An Abundance of Katherines.” This talented man is not just a novelist, however. He became popular on the YouTube channel that he and his brother (Hank Green) started in 2007 called VlogBrothers. Together, they have also generated instructive episodes covering sciences, literature and history which they call Crash Course.

A quote near the beginning of “The Fault in Our Stars” declares, “Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book.”

“The Fault in Our Stars” is one of those books.

At a Glance:
Grade for book: A+
Available where: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Target

John Green Information: Twitter at @JohnGreen, Facebook at JohnGreenFans, Instagram at @JohnGreenWritesBooks

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