Right about the time that The Fault in Our Stars came out, TIME magazine wrote a review,
waxing poetic about how different the novel was and how genuine it was. I can’t
remember what exactly was said but I remember that the reviewer had made it
sound like a wonderful book. It’s rare that TIME magazine reviews young adult
novels and The Fault in Our Stars
review was probably the first that they did since I started reading TIME.

Like a lot of books that I tell myself to read, I never
actually read The Fault in Our Stars
until recently. I was busy with family affairs that I don’t want to delve into
when the novel came out. It was over the summer when people on Twitter brought
up The Fault in Our Stars that I
remembered the TIME magazine review and the fact that I wanted to read it.
A friend loaned me The
Fault in Our Stars and I was reading it on-and-off. It’s a slow book but
totally compelling, filled with bursts of humor, as Jodi Picoult says, and
genuine truth. Hazel Waters is a terminal cancer patient and has been for the
past few years. She attends a Cancer Support Group at the hospital, where she
meets Augustus Waters, another cancer patient.
Now before you roll your eyes, it’s important to remember
that TIME magazine called the novel a different cancer novel. (I can’t remember
the exact words that they used.) The Fault in Our Stars is a novel about
love, grief, cancer, living, dying, and being a teenager. It’s not a novel about how crappy cancer is
and moping around is justifiable. No.
If I only had one sentence to say about The Fault in Our Stars, it would be this: The Fault in Our Stars is a Sad Novel (capitalization on that is
intended) but at the same time, it’s a thought provoking novel about life and
the universal questions that surround it, no matter at what age. Both Hazel and Augustus live with cancer, as
Augustus says that he is cancer, but they try to live normal lives, not letting
cancer define who they are as people.
It is because that they have cancer that Augustus and Hazel
contemplate questions such as “Will I be remembered?” “What mark will I leave
behind?”. Both of them so do with audacity and perhaps a sense of innocence
that is slipping away since they know that they might not have much time left. Augustus says, “The real heroes anyway aren’t
the people doing things; the real heroes are the people NOTICING things, paying
attention. The guy who invented the smallpox vaccine didn’t actually invent
anything. He just noticed that people with cowpox didn’t get smallpox."
Hazel and Augustus both use big words and talk in an
intellectual way however it doesn’t distract from the readability, instead it
adds to it. There’s a quirky edge to The
Fault in Our Stars because of it and it adds a sense of genuineness to the
novel.
Hazel says to Augustus, “The whole thing where a boy who is not unattractive or unintelligent or seemingly in any way unacceptable stares at me and points out incorrect uses of literality and compares me to actresses and asks me to watch a movie at his house. But of course there is always a hamatia and yours is that oh, my God, even though you HAD FREAKING CANCER you give money to a company in exchange for a chance to acquire YET MORE CANCER. Oh, my God. Let me assure you that not being able to breathe? SUCKS. Totally disappointing. Totally.”
Sometimes when I mention The
Fault In Our Stars to people, I get this immediate reaction of “Augustus!! ♥” . I’m bothered by it. Maybe it’s because my life is so affected by
cancer and death that I think of how brilliantly the novel portrays cancer,
grief, tragedy, and the act of being alive that I can’t think of how amazing
Augustus is as a character as a first thought. This novel isn’t just a romance
novel; in fact, it’s so much more than that. It’s a novel about living, rather
than dying, even if cancer is present. Cancer isn’t really the focus point of
the novel. It’s through love, cancer, and tragedy that John Green sends his
message about how screwed up life can be sometimes and how there’s so much more
to life.
The Fault in Our Stars
blew me away by its simplicity and the depth. It was perfect in every way and John
Green achieved everything that he set out to achieve in this novel.


Yaaaay! You've finally joined the TFIOS cult! >:)
ReplyDeleteIs this your first John Green book??
BTW, your review is so beautifully written! I'm so jealous!
Yes, it's my first John Green novel. It's also the Penguin USA Twitter book club book! Thanks for the compliment! :)
ReplyDelete