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The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green













The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

‘The Fault in Our Stars’ employed an excellent writing technique that disseminated story plots progressively. John Green’s use of short but precise sentences ensured the story never lost its emotional grip on the reader. Though, for the most part, the tone had a melancholic affiliation, there were times when dialogues were happy and romantic.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

Though it got narrated from the first-person perspective, its dialogues were not dependent on the story’s narrator this added to character authenticity. The story’s fluidity made them intricately definitive.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

‘ The Fault in Our Stars’ dialogues was natural and progressive. Some had a spark in their personality one of them was Kaitlyn, Hazel’s friend from her life before cancer. Both Hazel and Augustus’s parents never felt happy because they watched their children slowly lose to cancer. Peter Van Houten became a mean alcoholic because of the feeling of getting isolated from his family legacy. Though some characters had a subtle and happy persona, Hazel still defined the majority as sad people waiting to die.įor the non-terminal characters in the novel, a shadow of sadness clouded them as each had a personal issue that made their life terrible. For one, Patrick got described as an over-optimistic middle-aged man who felt thankful for losing his fertility to cancer. Because the story occurred in the first-person perspective, Hazel’s relationship with the characters was the only way to give an insight into their lives. The characters’ lives got limited to Hazel’s observation. Its apt attention to intricate details about the lives of its characters made it a story worth reading. The authenticity of the story made it an incredibly relatable tale. However, though she felt broken and torn, a letter from Augustus made her realize that though their love story was short, it was worth every second.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

By losing Augustus, Hazel got thrown into the realization that her fate was ultimately inescapable. The novel propelled realism by turning Hazel’s romantic infatuation into sorrow. However, the story brings its reader back to reality by revealing that Augustus would inevitably die. The novel’s inculcation of love into Hazel’s life makes the story dynamic as the reader gets thrown into a state of euphoric agitation. Though her ailment was incurable, Hazel’s story changed for good as she met Augustus. ‘The Fault in Our Stars’presented a story where its primary character got thrown into a crisis she could never escape. The story dived into the ideology of its primary character, Hazel, and showed how her perception of life, cancer, and death affected her relationships. ‘The Fault in Our Stars’ by John Green eloquently disseminated a heart-wrenching story to the audience and showed them the emotional vulnerability of its characters.















The Fault in Our Stars by John Green