
While they don’t learn the ending, they do become a couple.

Gus uses his Wish to take Hazel to Amsterdam to find out the ending to her favorite book. Gus fears he’ll die without accomplishing something great and leaving his mark on the world. Hazel has accepted her fate of an early death, but worries how her parents will handle it. They discuss poetry, books, and the meaning of life and death. Hazel and Augustus meet at Support Group and bond over literature.

#The fault in our stars book movie#
If you haven’t read the biggest teen romance to hit bookshelves (and movie theaters) in years, this handy cheat sheet will get you all caught up. Teens everywhere are still reading, watching, and buzzing about this story. The message of living and loving despite dying are profound and much more worth thinking about than the topics of most other teen (and other) books published today.Get your tissues ready it’s time to discuss The Fault in Our Stars. The Fault in Our Stars essentially deals with the meaning of life in one, not terribly long novel. The writing is fantastic, and the philosophical questions it deals with are of amazing proportions. When asked to review the novel, one adolescent reader wrote, “This is THE most amazing book I have ever read. With the novel’s universal themes resonating through the voice of teenage protagonists, adolescent readers can easily connect and identify with the characters. Eventually, the young lovers confess their affection for one another and vow to support one another even as Augustus and Hazel’s health worsen.

Hazel and Augustus develop an immediate connection at the meeting. Augustus attends the meeting to support his friend, who is losing his remaining eye as the tumor in his body continues to spread.

Subsequently, at the meetings, she meets and falls in love with Augustus Waters, a sixteen-year-old amputee and ex-basketball player who has also been diagnosed with terminal cancer. Told from the perspective of Hazel Grace, a sixteen-year-old girl who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer, she is forced to attend a support group by her parents. The novel is based on the true story of a young teenager, Esther Earl, whose heartbreaking experience in battling thyroid cancer inspired the author. Yet, the protagonist’s wit and sense of humor throughout the first-person narration lightens the seriousness and gravity of the narrative. The title, inspired by nobleman Cassius’ lines in William Shakespeare’s play, Julius Caesar, explores serious themes, such as the insensitivity of the universe, the necessity of human suffering, the reality of death, human existence, and human consciousness. Published in 2012, The Fault in Our Stars is Green’s sixth novel. Ranked among the favorites of “Teen Fiction,” John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars appears five times in the top 100 list.
