Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Realistic fiction#1- The Fault in Our Stars

It's a romantic love story. It's a story about the power of reading. It's about why we exist, is there an afterlife, why does it matter? And it is a book about teens living with cancer.
Hazel's diagnosis has been terminal from the beginning but a miracle drug has bought her a few more years. She is depressed and obsessed by a book titled The Imperial Affliction about a teen girl with cancer that ends mid sentence. One day she meets the very hot Augustus Waters at Cancer Kid Support Group. Gus has lost a leg to cancer but the odds of surviving his particular kind of cancer are pretty good, 80% to be exact. They connect. Deeply. Gus "spends" his Genie Foundation special wish on a trip for the two of them (and Hazel's mother) to Amsterdam to meet the author of The Imperial Affliction. They hope to find out what happened to the characters in the book after it ended. Was the Dutch Tulip Man good or a con man? Did he marry Anna's mother? What happened to Sisyphus the Hamster?

I know of no other book like this one. This book was especially meaningful to me because I have a niece who was diagnosed with cancer her sophomore year of college. She underwent a full year of horrible chemo and radiation. I am happy to report that she has been NEC (no evidence of cancer) for 2 years. John Green is one of her favorite authors. She told me about this book last summer pre-publication. He announced on the Internet that he would sign all 150,000 copies of the first print run of the book (the library copy I read is signed).

This is an incredible book. The dialogue is trademark John Green: intelligent, quick witted, and irreverent.  John Green is a young author who is incredibly hip. He won the Prinz Award for Looking for Alaska and his other books (Abundance of Katherines, Paper Towns, and Will Grayson, Will Grayson) are popular and have also won awards.

This book is for older teens. Only a brief introduction would be needed - something similar to the first paragraph. For many readers all you would need to say is "new book by John Green". 

Green, John. The Fault in Our Stars. Dutton, 2012. Prinz Award 2013? Got my vote.