A review by reviewsfromabookworm
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

4.0

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I know you all might be shocked by this but, the first I read TFIOS I thought it was okay (no pun intended) but it didn't blow me away in the way I had thought it would. I read it a few years ago now, before seeing all the blog hype but I still knew that this was seen as a special read. I was expecting to be really moved and to sob my little heart out, but I didn't even tear up once while reading. I decided to reread it before seeing the film and I am so pleased that I did because I got all of the feels the second time round. I think I can even see why I didn't fall so in love with it the first time round.





TFIOS probably suffered because of the hype, I had high expectations that I was about to read a book that I would instantly connect to and cry over. I didn't though and I know why that was the first time around. Hazel and Augustus are brilliant characters, truly they are but they never felt real to me. I think most people can agree that they aren't exactly your typical teenagers, in fact I don't think one of them exists anywhere let alone two of them. So the idea of these two people both living in one town, going to the same support group did seem a little unreal. They weren't realistic characters in a lot of ways and that instantly disconnected me from the story the first time around. The second time, I went with it because I knew exactly what I was getting. I knew the characters I would find and I wanted to find them there. Augustus and Hazel are brilliant characters and I don't care if they don't sound or act like authentic teenagers, they are exceptional characters and I wouldn't change either of them.






A boy movie?

Okay, I lied. I lie a lot, deal with it! I would change Hazel Grace because she has two fatal flaws. 1. She refers to V for Vendetta as a boys film that she shouldn't be expected to watch or enjoy & 2. She doesn't like 300 either. What? Nope, I can't deal with that. She loses a ton of cool points for those two completely unforgivable things. V for Vendetta is beyond awesome and it's not a guys movie or a girls movie, it's just a movie and a pretty awesome one at that. So Augustus Waters won a bazillion points for the fact that he's not only gorgeous and intelligent but he also has fantastic taste in films.



I enjoyed the humour in this book, and there's a lot of it! The characters in this are exceptionally witty and I adore that about them. From all of Augustus's jokes about Isaac going blind, to all of the sarcasm that you find throughout. Characters that genuinely make you laugh can be hard to find, so it's great to find a book that doesn't have just one, but three characters who make you giggle.



I have already said that my reread produced tears, but there was no uncontrollable sobbing. I really want this book to make me feel everything that it seems to make others feel, but it doesn't. I think it's because the characters never feel real so there predicament and the outcome for them both doesn't affect me that much. I don't care about them the way I do with characters who feel real to me, who I come to know and love and who almost seem like real people. Augustus and Hazel always felt like fictional characters to me, so there was always a detachment there.



There were specific moments that made me cry. One was around the 120 page mark and it was because of how happy Hazel and Augustus were about their upcoming trip to Amsterdam. I can't remember what moment it was exactly, but I knew what was coming for them and it just made me sad. The other moment I remember really getting to me was when Hazel's mother realised Hazel had heard her that day at the hospital. That one really got to me and had tears in my eyes, a few might have even slipped out. The other moment that definitely had me in tears was when they went to the Anne Frank house. That was because of all of Hazel's thoughts about her and just how determined she was to climb all those stairs. She realised that, yes she has terminal cancer and she's going to die young, but that others had suffered so much more. If they could get through it then so could she. That moment really had me crying.



There's not really much I can say about the book that you probably haven't heard or read before. It tells a great story and, to me, it feels like an adorable romance at it's heart. But then it deals with death and dying young, the idea of wanting to leave something behind, to not be forgotten. Others see this as a sad read, but it has always seemed more uplifting to me. Maybe that's why I don't cry as much at it as others do. I think it depends what you decide to take away from it.



I started writing this review when I finished the book over a week ago but, as I often do, got totally sidetracked and am only just finishing it. I am struggling to recall all the emotions that I had for it after that read. But I know that after I finished I actually hugged the book, which is really strange because I am not a book hugger very often. But it was such a sad yet completely uplifting ending and it worked perfectly for me. I knew what was coming though, so that always helps, I don't think any first time readers will end it feeling super happy.






4/5 Butterflies





This is never going to be a 5/5, out of this world read for me. I enjoy the story and the characters but I don't get the intense emotions everyone else does. Would I recommend this? Definitely, because it's superbly written, has witty and hilarious characters and as many sad moments as it does happy ones. Even if it doesn't reduce you to a sobbing, uncontrollable mess, it's still going to make you feel something. So read, enjoy and maybe find a mind-blowing read that you'll never be able to forget.