Saturday, 7 November 2015

The Fault In Our Stars - too many faults, not enough stars!

I don't get it! Is there something wrong with me? I chose to read this book because I'd kept seeing really great reviews about it and didn't want to miss out on what everyone else seemed to be saying was a fabulous read. However, The Fault In Our Stars, by John Green has left me with the feeling that I am on a different wavelength to all of those people. The plot is brave - basically, a love story between two teenagers - Hazel Grace, a 16-year-old terminal cancer patient, and the devilishly handsome Augustus, a 17-year-old cancer survivor - surely, this can't end well. Hazel is clever but quite insular and seems to be hanging onto life purely for the sake of her parents. Augustus is athletic - despite the loss of one of his legs to cancer - smart, funny and has a heart the size of Alaska. She initially resists his advances as she does not want him to suffer the inevitable loss when she dies ... but of course, she fails. His dogged persistence and his overwhelming and quite unbelievable awesomeness(!) wear her down ... as if we didn't know! At this point, I will say no more about what happens so as not to give any more of the plot away ... but I suspect that most people will guess. The underlying theme of living with cancer and what it does to the individual and those who love them is laudable, but the two central characters are so unrealistic in how they talk to each other that it ruined it for me. No two people are THAT smart, THAT funny and THAT wise at THAT age. I'm all for love stories, but this one left me cold. It's fiction yes, you do have to suspend your disbelief on occasion, but this story pushed me way beyond the limit. It's all too contrived and I felt like it was just trying too hard. Does this make me a bad person? Maybe in some people's eyes, but when an author doesn't seem to trust the reader to have any intellectual connection with their work, I feel a little let down. Many will love this book, but my heart strings were left well and truly un-pulled. If you want a tragic love story that will stay with you for ever, then look no further than Birdsong.

My STAR rating: TWO.

Length: 336 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from library as an ebook.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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