Would you be able to live life to the fullest even if you had tumors in your lungs and were living on a new drug? That's Hazel Grace Lancaster for you in John Green's newest novel, The Fault In Our Stars. Hazel is a miracle child. She has cancer in lungs, and has faced a near death situation, but she lived through it with the help of a drug that didn't work on most people. Other then that she has a regular life, she goes to college at the young age of sixteen and loves America's Next Top Model. Her mom makes her go to Support Group, but she despises it. But, she doesn't know yet that her life will take a turn for the better with the help Of Support Group. One day in Support Group she meets Augustus Waters, a handsome seventeen-year-old that has had his leg amputated.
They get to know each other better over a movie that same day and they start talking about books. Hazel Grace recommends An Imperial Affliction and that's where there stories go up. She gets Augustus interested in the book and told him that she wrote Peter Van Houten (the author) letters, but he never replied. So he tried and he got a hold of him. Hazel had some questions that she wanted to ask him, but Houten would only answer them if she came to Amsterdam. Hazel had already used her Wish from the Genies, but Augustus had saved his.
So, they both went to Amsterdam along with Hazel's mother. Hazel and Augustus went to meet Houten and he turned out to be an alcoholic with no manners. Hazel was really upset, but agreed to go to Anne Frank's house with Augustus. So they went and were watching a video about Otto Frank and how he came to discover that no one in his family survived. While Frank was expressing his sorrow, Augustus and Hazel were making out. Right then and there, in front of everyone. After that they went and spent some time together.
The next morning was their last morning in Amsterdam, and Augustus wanted to talk to Hazel privately. After Hazel's mom left, Augustus said that he had signs of cancer again and he didn't know how long he would last. He wasn't sure of anything in his life anymore except that he was in love with Hazel Grace Lancaster, but was she going to lose him?
What's going to happen to them? All of these events lead up to something great, but I'm not going to reveal it. Every reader will take the ending in a different and I want you to think of it in your own way. Find out what happens in John Green's The Fault in Our Stars.
They get to know each other better over a movie that same day and they start talking about books. Hazel Grace recommends An Imperial Affliction and that's where there stories go up. She gets Augustus interested in the book and told him that she wrote Peter Van Houten (the author) letters, but he never replied. So he tried and he got a hold of him. Hazel had some questions that she wanted to ask him, but Houten would only answer them if she came to Amsterdam. Hazel had already used her Wish from the Genies, but Augustus had saved his.
So, they both went to Amsterdam along with Hazel's mother. Hazel and Augustus went to meet Houten and he turned out to be an alcoholic with no manners. Hazel was really upset, but agreed to go to Anne Frank's house with Augustus. So they went and were watching a video about Otto Frank and how he came to discover that no one in his family survived. While Frank was expressing his sorrow, Augustus and Hazel were making out. Right then and there, in front of everyone. After that they went and spent some time together.
The next morning was their last morning in Amsterdam, and Augustus wanted to talk to Hazel privately. After Hazel's mom left, Augustus said that he had signs of cancer again and he didn't know how long he would last. He wasn't sure of anything in his life anymore except that he was in love with Hazel Grace Lancaster, but was she going to lose him?
What's going to happen to them? All of these events lead up to something great, but I'm not going to reveal it. Every reader will take the ending in a different and I want you to think of it in your own way. Find out what happens in John Green's The Fault in Our Stars.