Find Us on Facebook

What We're Tweeting About

  • Rachel Simmons kicks off GLI's NJ launch:... http://t.co/STMJ5BsI 31 weeks 5 days ago
  • CA Educator Training: Check out this amazing group of Truck Drivers! http://t.co/ZoUT950o 31 weeks 6 days ago
  • A Mighty Girl has a new music section! Yahoo!! http://t.co/1f1P2EMq http://t.co/3vbIfMWO 32 weeks 23 hours ago
  • Why should companies hire women in leadership roles? Because, a new study finds, women are good for the bottom... http://t.co/9DxOFaWm 32 weeks 1 day ago
  • In honor of breast cancer awareness month we are turning our attention to Pink Ribbon Blues, a new breast cancer... http://t.co/AViN5Rqb 32 weeks 1 day ago

Book Notes: The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

By Shannon Rigney Keane on Tue, 08/07/2012 - 17:09

Shannon reviews John Green's heart-wrenching novel: The Fault in Our Stars. Fault in Our Stars

This book came from a friend with this warning: Don't read it in public (unless you like crying in front of strangers).

I expected a book about kids with terminal cancer to be sad. I didn't necessarily expect it to be so irreverent, truthful, hilarious, smart, and universal.

Hazel is dying, and she knows it. Although a miraculous cancer drug (imagined by the author) keeps her cancer under control, she lives each day with the knowledge that this drug merely extends her life. The fact that her cancer is incurable informs everything that she does. Or does not do. Hazel is waiting to die, and while she does, she is trying to minimize her contact with the living.

Hazel and Augusts meet at a cancer support group. Living in the moment takes on a very literal meaning. They get through the physical and emotional pain in their lives by fiercely loving the people, books, sunshine, trees, and laughter that life also offers. Hazel and Augustus quote from their favorite book: “Pain demands to be felt.” John Green's book shows us that love demands to be felt, too. Hazel and Augustus could deny themselves the pleasure of the other's company, but they could no sooner turn off their feelings for each other than they could choose to make the sun set at will. Many things in this life are out of our control, and must be accepted. Green's characters live with that vivid reality more so than most of the rest of us do.

“The world is not a wish-granting factory,” Hazel and Augustus remind each other throughout the book, a joke referring to the “cancer perks” that kids with cancer receive. No number of perks can take the sting out of the injustice in their situation. Hazel and Augustus have experienced a life's worth of grief and disappointment in their short time, and it has made them honest in ways that I can only describe as brave, even though Hazel and Augustus would both roll their eyes at my use of the “b” word.

The title of the book comes from a Shakespearian line: “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars/ But in ourselves.” No, argues the fictional author Peter Van Houten in a letter to Augustus, “there is no shortage of fault to be found amid our stars.” Our stars are flawed, our stars are beautiful, and these two qualities are very much dependent on the other. Life – whether it is a minute or a century long – demands that we experience both. And that we learn to trust in our own strength, and in the strength of those we love, to get us all through.

Through his empathy and imagination, John Green understands what it might be like to face one's own death before having had the chance to experience so much of what the rest of the world thinks of as life. The truly genius thing about this hopeful and surprising story is that Green shows how we each have the opportunity – each day, each moment – to live. Hazel and Augustus don't so much inspire as instruct us to start now.

This sounds like a great book

This sounds like a great book for my end of summer reading list!

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.