One of Green’s strengths is creating believable characters – people we could recognize in our own real worlds. They are loveable or despicable, but we adore them all for the very fact that they are “right” – they fit the world he has created and they serve a purpose in the grand scheme of things. The Fault in Our Stars is no exception to this Green-rule. From our main character, Hazel, who is sick but refuses to let that define her, to her parents – who are strong and weak, open and secretive; from Augustus, who is so consciously self-absorbed that he – and we- are actually able to enjoy
One of Green’s strengths is creating believable characters – people we could recognize in our own real worlds. They are loveable or despicable, but we adore them all for the very fact that they are “right” – they fit the world he has created and they serve a purpose in the grand scheme of things. The Fault in Our Stars is no exception to this Green-rule. From our main character, Hazel, who is sick but refuses to let that define her, to her parents – who are strong and weak, open and secretive; from Augustus, who is so consciously self-absorbed that he – and we- are actually able to enjoy