A book report on four of John Green’s novels
If you haven’t heard of The Fault In Our Stars, now is the time to crawl out from under your rock. The film adaptation starring Shailene Woodley (I’m going to call that she’s this year’s break-out star with Divergent coming out in March and Fault coming out in June) releases this summer, so get on the waiting list at your local library now if you know what’s good for you. I read this novel for book club and subsequently read two other titles by John Green. I am a fan.
Don’t let “Young Adult” fool you. Like the writers of Harry Potter, The Hunger Games and Divergent, John Green breathes life into the category with dynamic characters, imperative themes (such as that of needing to matter), and evocation of real emotion (I have both laughed out loud and cried my eyes out over his writing). Since he is not a series writer, here’s the run-down on four of his titles to get you started on your path, with help from a fellow John Green-fan Kate Jones.
Will Grayson Will Grayson
co-author: David Levithan
CATHERINE: For most of us, high school is a time of awkwardness and growing pains, for learning about friendship and what our interactions with others means, for experimenting with rebellion and testing our parents’ limits. This is true of the two narrators, Will Grayson and Will Grayson, Illinois teenage boys who meet unexpectedly one night in Chicago. The story revolves around the two Wills’ relationships with ironically-large-with-a-heart-of-gold Tiny Cooper and his musical/passion project, “Tiny Dancer.” This novel is theatrical, entertaining, and fun with some key universal truths disguised as teenage reflections. Note: I highly recommend getting this one on tape for the musical experience.
Paper Towns
KATE: It’s a coming-of-age story of a high school senior named Quentin, with a touch of romance, adventure, and friendship. The novel begins with Quentin’s neighbor and secret love, Margo, taking Quentin on a late-night journey; the next day she disappears. The rest is his search for her, accompanied by his two best friends. The story is funny, clever, mysterious, sometimes frightening, and filled with philosophy. Seeing others the way we want to see them and not for who they really are is a major theme in this book… and an important thing to remember about the people we meet and those whom we love.
The Fault In Our Stars
KATE: Told from the point of view of a sixteen-year old cancer patient, Fault introduces Hazel who is forced by her parents to attend a support group. As the stars would have it, she meets a handsome boy there named Augustus. They fall in love. This book is their story. In this novel, I promise you laughter, love, awkwardness, frustration, heartbreak, and sorrow— every emotion you can imagine. This book presents “the sick and dying” as none other than beings like you and me. It also delves into the themes of life and death, and how to approach both.
CATHERINE: A great tale about first love, relationships with family and friends, and mortality… mixed with humor, humanity and wit. A recommended read for anyone looking to have his or her heart warmed.
An Abundance of Katherines
KATE: Like most young adults, the protagonist Colin struggles to find his purpose, his calling, how he will make his mark on the world. What makes Colin a little different from the rest of us is his ease (and obsession) with making anagrams, among other prodigy-like activities, such as memorizing random historical facts and making new mathematical theorems. When we meet Colin, he has just been dumped for the nineteenth time by a girl named Katherine. Colin is morose and self-absorbed, but with the help of his light-hearted friend Hassan, he gets over it. They decide to go on a road trip, and after a day or driving, they come upon Gutshot, Tennessee, where the real coming-of-age story begins…
CATHERINE: I chose this book because I really like my name (and continued to read even if the protagonist would never date a Catherine with a “C”). Contrary to popular opinion, I enjoyed this novel more than Fault, and I think it’s the simple fact that good humor is more difficult to master than tragedy. I found Colin and Hassan’s friendship amusing and their adventure fun to follow. A fight scene between Colin, Hassan and another character had me laughing out loud in a way a book hasn’t managed to do in a while, so from that moment on I knew I would fall for every word on the page. And, fall I did, re-realizing truths that are important to me in my mid-20s: what it means for people to like you, what it means to matter, what it means to remember, what it means to tell stories, and what it means to move on from hurt.
Have you read any of John Green’s books? What’s your favorite?
Catherine Abalos is founder and editor of The Single Diaries.
Kate Jones is in her third year as a Neuroscience Ph.D. student. She studies early visual processing using electrophysiological and optical techniques to measure light-evoked responses in different neurons of the retina. You can read more about what she does for fun here.