The Fault in Our Stars is about a teenage girl named Hazel Grace, who has cancer. Her parents force her to go to a cancer support group, where she then meets Augustus Waters. Augustus had cancer, but was cured of it after having his leg removed. He is best friends with Isaac, who attends the support group regularly, and who is about to become blind after having both of his eyes removed due to cancer. Gus and Hazel click almost immediately, and soon become close. They slowly fall in love as Hazel fights her illness, and the two go through many different ups and downs regarding both the disease, and life in general.
This book does a great job of tackling such existential questions as "why are we here?" and "is leaving your mark the most important thing?" while not sounding too pretentious or preachy. Deep topics are seamlessly integrated with more light-hearted topics, as well as an interesting story line that really draws you in. When this book arrived on my doorstep, I went to my room and read it in one night. I literally could not put it down, which even led to me accidentally skipping dinner because I completely forgot about the time. It really is an incredible book, and I highly recommend it.
“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.” - John Green, The Fault in Our Stars
This book for me was absolutely heartbreaking but warming at the same time. It gives the reader an overwhelming sense of mortality. The courage the characters show in the face of such Illness is inspirational and for my the fault in our stars is a tale that stays with the reader long after the book is put down
ReplyDeleteThis book for me was absolutely heartbreaking but warming at the same time. It gives the reader an overwhelming sense of mortality. The courage the characters show in the face of such Illness is inspirational and for my the fault in our stars is a tale that stays with the reader long after the book is put down
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