The story progresses on to a trip to Amsterdam despite all the odds to meet the Author of An Imperial Affliction-a wonderful trip to bring them closer, but an awful trip to meet the Peter Van Houten who turns out to be a disappointment (let me skip all the details).
Hazel suggests her favorite book An Imperial Affliction to him, while he gives her Price of Dawn based on a Video game. For example, the kissing scene in Anne Frank museum. His metaphor is ironical, no? Anyhow, I moved on to find more and more disappointing scene. But every single pack sold means you’re encouraging the company to produce more and kill more people with it. It takes a while to develop a cancer from smoking, and to catch a lung cancer from smoking he would have to live many years, which he might not have owing to the cancer he already had, thus the cigarette had little chances of killing of him even if lighted.
#THE FAULT IN OUR STARS PUBLISHER MOVIE#
Why should a girl suffering from Cancer who thinks she doesn’t want anyone in her life since she’d be a grenade to them, goes off to watch a movie with a boy who had been staring at her relentlessly, and who finds it metaphorical to put cigarette between his lips and encourage all those cigarette companies to give people more of the cancer saying he isn’t giving it the power to kill. The next scene, however, not only failed to impress me but also presented a flaw. The main story starts off when Hazel Grace finds a blue-eyed boy staring her throughout a Cancer Support group in the literal heart of Jesus. The story is about Hazel Grace and Augustus Waters, both victims of different kinds of cancers. The topic chosen by the author is a critical topic that can only be dealt with care and compassion. I would like to award this book with four stars out of five.
I’ve just finished watching the movie, after finishing an overnight reading of the book by John Green. Genre: Young Adult, Realistic Fiction, Contemporary Characters: Hazel Grace Lancaster, Augustus Waters, Isaac