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“That’s the thing about pain. It demands to be felt”

October 19, 2017 by Caitlin_D 3 Comments

This is my second time reviewing The Fault in Our Stars and it’s been reviewed countless times on Cannonball so I’m not going to do a whole plot summary. What I need is for more of you to read Turtles All The Way Down so I can argue the following (potentially controversial) point: Turtles All The Way Down is better than The Fault in Our Stars. 

This isn’t to say TFIOS is a bad book or even undeserving of the 5 Star rating I gave it 4 years ago and again today.  It is simply a preference I am more than happy to debate with a fellow Cannonballer should the occasion arise. I think my biggest reason for preferring Turtles may just be because it struck a more familiar chord with me. I suffer from anxiety and am close with a dozen people in varying states of OCD and social anxiety but have been blessed with a childhood and adolescence free from cancer.

I will not tell you our love story, because—like all real love stories—it will die with us, as it should. I’d hoped that he’d be eulogizing me.”

TFIOS seems more traditionally YA than Turtles–  I forgot how brief the courtship between Hazel and Augustus was- with a more prominent love story and angst. Despite its brevity the relationship between Hazel and Gus is beautiful; it is both unrealistically romantic and painfully rooted in the messy reality of real teen relationships. I will continue to hate, but respect the hell out of, Green’s choice to kill one of his darlings. The darling that, I suspect, gutted people more deeply to lose than the more obvious choice would.

“It’s total bullshit,” he said. “The whole thing. Eighty percent survival rate and he’s in the twenty percent? Bullshit. He was such a bright kid. It’s bullshit. I hate it. But it was sure a privilege to love him, huh?”

Filed Under: Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: john green, The Fault in Our Stars, Turtles All The Way Down

About Caitlin_D

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Aiming for my fourth Double Cannonball with this awesome community View Caitlin_D's reviews»

Comments

  1. The Mama says

    October 20, 2017 at 8:58 am

    I just read Turtles (so look for a review in, oh, eight months or so cause I suck at reviewing). I thought it was excellent. I have a few tiny nits to pick but overall, Green hit it out of the park, and those hits were flawless.
    Controversial: I still haven’t read TFIOS.
    But I’ll talk to you about Turtles!!!

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    • Caitlin_d says

      October 20, 2017 at 3:01 pm

      What were your nits! Was it the $$?

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      • The Mama says

        October 20, 2017 at 3:27 pm

        Maybe? Probably that a little bit. I wish he had fleshed out the supporting characters just a tiny bit more. The solving of the mystery happened a little too tidily for my taste; the way he telegraphed it ahead of time bothered me just a bit.
        At first I didn’t love the ending, but now that I’m sitting on it, I can’t see where it could have gone any other way and I’m liking it more.
        I think maybe what bothers me the most is that I’m reading so much about this book being like, The Book on mental illness and while it absolutely is a great book about mental illness, it’s about Aza’s mental illness, not mental illness in general, cause there is no one size fits all when it comes to that. So that’s not on Green at all; that’s on reviewers and readers. So I dunno; maybe that’s my nit.
        I thought that he absolutely NAILED the stream of consciousness parts with her thoughts.

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