Thursday, December 3, 2015

The Fault in Our Stars


The Fault in Our Stars

Green, John. The Fault in Our Stars. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 2012.

Summary:
Hazel Grace Lancaster is not your typical sixteen-year-old. Hazel is in a battle for her life against thyroid cancer. At age thirteen, she left school in order to have some sense of a life. Since her parents believe she is constantly depressed, they subject her to weekly support group meetings at a local church. Hazel is reluctant to attend until one day her perspective changes when she meets a basketball-playing boy who has also been battling cancer named Augustus Waters. Quickly Hazel and Augustus connect and their relationship blossoms into romance. Will love prevail? Or will cancer get the best of their affection?

Analysis:
Initially, I was going to review this book in audiobook format; however, after previewing the audiobook, the reader’s voice didn’t quite fit the voice I had already been imaging for Hazel. Because of this disconnect, I opted to read John Green’s masterpiece novel. And am I glad I did!

John Green has the amazing ability to capture his audience and reader within the first few lines of this novel. The reader finds him or herself immediately connecting with Hazel and empathizing with her over her struggles with her parents. Since this novel is told from Hazel’s perspective, the reader has greater insight.

Green’s flow of story is initially slow, allowing for the appropriate background to build and to help engross the reader as he or she is submerged in Hazel’s world. The reader becomes invested. Because of Green’s ability to make the reader become one of his characters, you’ll find yourself constantly thinking about the characters in this story as if they were your own parents, friends, and neighbors.

The plot is simplistic, yet so full of detail with the growth of a budding relationship. The growth of the relationship becomes pivotal in this story and is something with which all young adults can relate. Young adults can also connect with the underlying themes of sacrifice and loss.

The language in The Fault in Our Stars reads as natural-thought making this a very enjoyable and smooth read. Green has the knack for transferring authentic thought and dialogue to text. Adults, young and old, will be able to connect with Green’s style and Hazel’s story. It is no wonder that this book is a best seller and was created into a popular movie. Green allows the reader to peek into a world that may be unfamiliar and allows readers to grapple with the difficult circumstances surrounding cancer and love. If you don’t know Hazel’s story, you should.

Awards and Review Excerpts:
 2013 Teen Choice Award Finalist
- #1 New York Times Best Seller
TIME Magazines #1 Book of 2012
- #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller
- #1 USA Today Bestseller
- #1 International Bestseller
- #1 Indie Bestseller

From Publishers Weekly: “If there's a knock on John Green (and it's more of a light tap considering he's been recognized twice by the Printz committee) it's that he keeps writing the same book: nerdy guy in unrequited love with impossibly gorgeous girl, add road trip. His fourth novel departs from that successful formula to even greater success: this is his best work yet.”

From TIME Magazine: “Damn near genius . . . The Fault in Our Stars is a love story, one of the most genuine and moving ones in recent American fiction, but it’s also an existential tragedy of tremendous intelligence and courage and sadness.” —Lev Grossman

From NPR.org: “[Green’s] voice is so compulsively readable that it defies categorization. You will be thankful for the little infinity you spend inside this book.”

From Booklist: “In its every aspect, this novel is a triumph.”

From The Washington Post: “John Green deftly mixes the profound and the quotidian in this tough, touching valentine to the human spirit.”

From The Atlantic: “This is a book that breaks your heart – not by wearing it down, but by making it bigger and bigger until it bursts.”

Connections:
 Collect and share other novels written by John Green, such as:
Looking for Alaska ISBN 9780142402511
Paper Towns ISBN 9780142414934
An Abundance of Katherines ISBN 9780142410707

Collect and share other stories centered around cancer and its affects, such as:
My Sister’s Keeper by Jodi Picoult ISBN 9780743454537
A Summer to Die by Lois Lowry ISBN 9780385734202

Research and learn more about various types of cancer, including Hazel’s form of thyroid cancer. Collect information regarding support groups, treatment, and protocol for cancer patients.

Learn more about John Green. Visit his website at http://johngreenbooks.com.

After reading The Fault in Our Stars view John Green’s SPOILERS at Questions About The Fault in Our Stars Spoilers

Listen to John Green read aloud the first chapter in The Fault in Our Stars. In my opinion, his reading is better than the audiobook. View this at YouTube - John Green Reading

Watch the movie version of The Fault in Our Stars and compare book and movie. I still have yet to see the movie. I’d much rather read the book first. View the trailer here The Fault in Our Stars - Movie Trailer

Write about a time you experienced any of Hazel’s feelings in your own life (i.e. romance, loss, anger, regret, etc.). How would you handle being Hazel?

This contemporary realistic fiction novel is a must read for any young adult! Be sure to add this to your reading diet… It’s a healthy dose of love, sacrifice, emotion, and humor!

*Image borrowed from www.barnesandnoble.com

~ Mandy J

The Arrival


The Arrival

Tan, Shaun. The Arrival. New York, NY: Arthur A. Levine Books, 2006. ISBN 9780439895293

Summary:
The Arrival is an intricate, detailed account of immigration told completely in graphics. The main character, a father, must leave his family and travel to a distant, unfamiliar land. As he travels and makes new friends, he learns their immigration stories, too. These additional stories are incorporated throughout the book showing the various trials, struggles, emotions, and feelings of relief immigrants’ experience. Will any of these immigrants find their new home?

Analysis:
Tan tells this important story of immigration through the use of sepia colored graphics. The cover immediately offers appeal, as it appears as an old, worn book. The reader initially encounters the characters in the end pages of the book. The reader will find him/herself studying each person carefully wondering about his or her story. Tan’s main characters are very believable despite the fact that the story is set in a fantasy world with make believe animals, larger than life people, a strange language, odd buildings, and bizarre looking food. These elements make this a work of high fantasy.

The unique lettering and language offers the reader the real experience of immigrants coming to a foreign land. Often times, immigrants find themselves in unfamiliar places with language that is difficult and troubling to read and speak. This is how the reader finds him or herself. Shaun Tan submerges the reader in his created world.

The storyline of the book is the same as most immigration stories – people leaving or fleeing their homeland in search of a safer, more promising home. Each character tells a similar story. Repeatedly, the reader encounters the same emotions and feelings felt by the immigrants.

Tan’s quadrilateral outlined illustrations vary from pages with many square images to full-page illustrations. Each small illustration builds on the knowledge of the previous image. The reader will find him or herself lost in Tan’s world as they carefully study each intricate graphic over and over.

Shaun Tan’s The Arrival is a beautiful, wordless work of art. The author’s note found at the end of the book offers a unique insight to many of Tan’s illustrations. Keen readers will pick up on the historical similarities of events and places of the past, such as the Titanic and Ellis Island. This is certainly a piece that should accompany any unit on immigration. It is truly fascinating! My seven-year-old daughter even made me promise that I’d let her read The Arrival next!

Awards and Review Excerpts:
2008 Boston Globe – Horn Book Award Winner
- New York Magazine’s Best Comics of 2007
- New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book of 2007
- New York Times Notable Children’s Books of 2007
- Publishers Weekly’s Best Comics of 2007
- Washington Posts Best Books for Young People of 2007

From Kirkus Review: “An astonishing wordless graphic novel blends historical imagery with science-fiction elements to depict-brilliantly-the journey of an immigrant man from his terror-beset land of origin to a new, more peaceful home.”

From School Library Journal: “Young readers will be fascinated by the strange new world the artist creates, complete with floating elevators and unusual creatures, but may not realize the depth of meaning or understand what the man's journey symbolizes. More sophisticated readers, however, will grasp the sense of strangeness and find themselves participating in the man's experiences. They will linger over the details in the beautiful sepia pictures and will likely pick up the book to pore over it again and again.”

From Children’s Literature: “The pictures are drawn with a sepia overtone, giving them the feel of ancient photographs. Small and large pictures are intermingled skillfully, giving the reader details as well as close up views of important events or people.”

From The Washington Post: The Arrival is neck-and-neck with Brian Selznick's The Invention of Hugo Cabret for most original children's book of 2007, but unlike that uneven effort, it's definitely not just for the young.” – Elizabeth Ward

From The New York Times: “The effect is mesmerizing. Reading The Arrival feels like paging through a family treasure newly discovered up in the attic.” – Gene Luen Yang

Connections:
Collect and share other works created by Shaun Tan, such as:
Lost and Found ISBN 9780545229241
Tales from Outer Suburbia ISBN 9780545055871
Rules for Summer ISBN 9780545639125

Collect other wordless fantasy books, such as:
Journey by Aaron Becker ISBN 9780763660536
Quest by Aaron Becker ISBN 9780763665951

Share the “Author’s Note” found at the end of The Arrival. Research and share important information regarding Tan’s historical research, such as:
- The Titanic and its sinking (1912)
- Ellis Island, New York – 1892 and 1953 – Ellis Island Immigration Museum
The Bicycle Thief film (1948)
- Gustave Dore’s engraving Over London by Rail (1870)
- Tom Roberts’ painting Going South (1886)

Compare Shaun Tan’s story of immigration to those found in other historical accounts or school textbooks.

Encourage students to create their own graphic novel with an element(s) of fantasy. Watch this video of Shaun Tan sharing his studio at Inside Shaun Tan's Studio

Watch and listen as Shaun Tan talks about his work, The Arrival at Scholastic Interview with Shaun Tan

Learn more about Shaun Tan and visit his website - http://www.shauntan.net


*Images borrowed from www.barnesandnoble.com

Enjoy the journey!

~ Mandy :)