Hazel Grace Lancaster's 'The Fault In Our Stars'

816 Words2 Pages

Madison Schmenk
Mrs.Atkin
ELA 8
23 September 2015
The Fault in Our Stars In the book, The Fault in Our Stars the plot is an interesting one, unlike anything in any other book I’ve read. The story follows Hazel Grace Lancaster, who is your common seventeen year old high school student… except for one thing, she’s battling cancer. Not just any cancer, but one that causes her breathing to be less than successful which has caused her to travel using an oxygen tank. When she was younger, she struggled more with her disease than she does currently. The odds of her making it back then looked very grim, but she overcame it… she didn’t beat the disease, but she learned to live with it and I think that speaks a lot to her character. She’s friendly and down to earth, even though she’s been dragged through the dirt simply trying to survive. There are many ups and downs but one silver lining is her meeting a boy from a cancer support group her mother forces her to attend. …show more content…

Their pain isn’t something I can understand, but if I try to apply it to certain things in my life, I think I can get a little bit of an idea. They just want to be kids but they’re dealing with problems that not even adults can understand fully. There are always bumps in the road, but the biggest one comes when Gus gets sick again. Hazel was convinced she was a bomb who would destroy everything, but Gus takes that title. He tries to ignore his illness, but that doesn’t make him better. He eventually ends up passing away, leaving Hazel with nothing but good memories and a desire to live the way he did. At his funeral, Peter Van Houten delivers Hazel a note that Gus wanted him to write… the note shocks Hazel but gives her some peace too. The book is about suffering and how to cope with it, I think it helps a lot. It gives you the chance to be in someone else’s head and to understand to the best of your

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