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Showing posts with label John Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Green. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Nonfiction, Nonfun?

AKA: True crime only fueled my paranoia. And yet... I liked it?


So, at this big interview thing, my interviewer (seems like bad word choice) asked me what genre I disliked the most. And I just blurted nonfiction. I don't know, I guess I was thinking of my social studies text book (which does include tidbits of fun; like really fancy people in the middle east used to have parties where people would admire their super expensive, imported tulips, at night, by candlelight. Candles on top of turtles. Yes.). But generally, that book is awful. The lady tries to butter me up, talking about this book, Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand. It's about a shipwrecked Olympian runner who fought in World War II.
We were selecting nonfiction to read for Lit, and for who knows what reason, I started looking for In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote. I saw Unbroken near by, and honestly, it looked so much better. But In Cold Blood is a classic, and I felt like impressing my teacher by subjecting myself to reading it in a ridiculously tight timeframe.
The book takes place in the late fifties to mid sixties, so it'd be a lot of fun. Except, the book starts out from the perspective of the Clutter Family (alternating between a religious father, Herb Clutter, a quiet fifteen year old son, Kenyon, a popular sixteen year old daughter, Nancy and a mother with depression, Bonnie), and then to the perspective of Perry Smith, and Richard Hickock, their murderers, as it recounts the last day of their life.
After that it goes from the alternating perspective of the killers and the detectives.
The thing about the book is that... when you read a good fictional book, you are pulled into a different world. And when you read nonfiction you're generally aware that it's the real world. It's weird that for me, this means that nonfictional people- real people- are the two-dimensional ones, they're dead and gone, or they exist in a world that's unnatainable to you, but that you are still aware of... so I don't care. They're doing what they do... or did what they did, and unless they say or do something really prolific I don't feel like I'm the one keeping them alive (Yeah, apparently I am a host for parasitic fictional characters).
But in In Cold Blood I felt like I was keeping the Clutters alive, and more powerfully than that, that I was keeping Perry Smith alive. It was said that Truman Capote fell in love with Perry Smith. Half of the book is actually from Perry's perspective. This man is a killer. A heartless killer. And no one lies about that. He's despicable. But this book explores the other facets of the human personality. It's a book that doesn't objectify people to a single aspect of their personality.
I'm not one to sympathize with killers, out of the blue, or because of a 'troubled past'.  And at the same time, I wanted to cry at Kenyon and Nancy's childish naivety. The Clutters were portrayed as truely as possible, and as wonderful people. So you read this book and you have these conflicting emotions. A good family that you feel like you knew, was killed. And for forty bucks. So you want justice, but at the same time, you see Perry as this abused child who still wets the bed, cries, and sucks his thumb. A boy who was treated unjustly because of his ethnicity, a friendless, loveless man who dreams of traveling the world. A musical genius who loves little kids, who declares no prejudices, whose fingers are stained with paint and loves animals.
After I read this book, I haven't looked at recent mass murderers and thought, 'That guy just needs a hug', and sometimes when I was reading the book I had to pause and think, 'This isn't fiction. These people are evil'. Have you ever wondered how you would feel if a friend was a murderer? You felt like his friend. A friend of the murderer and the murdered. And it tears you apart a little.
So Nonfiction can be fun. And traumatizing? Maybe. OH! I finished reading Looking for Alaska, by John Green, speaking of traumatizing. It was great! I'm super sorry I waited so long to post anything. I'm a terrible person. But I hope that this convinced you to... read a book about your friendly neighborhood mass murderer. If it did, then my job is done. Bye!

~Sara

Friday, June 15, 2012

The Fault In Our Stars: Not Your Average Cancer Book

*This post contains no spoilers from The Fault In Our Stars (though it may contain minor fangirling)

The Fault In Our Stars is a novel that centers around a sixteen-year-old girl by the name of Hazel Grace who suffers from terminal cancer and is slowly but surely succumbing to death. Sounds depressing, right? But if you're thinking about putting this novel to the side as just another one of those melancholy "cancer books", then think again. 





Sara, if you are at all interested in young adult literature or YouTube (which I know for a fact you are), then it's pretty safe to say that you've heard of bestselling author John Green who is one half of the immensely popular YouTube channel, Vlogbrothers. If not, crawl out from under the rock you're living under and see what you're missing, my friend. With John Green being one of my favorite authors, it might sound a bit biased when I say that JOHN GREEN IS A WRITING GOD! But seriously, with all fangirling aside, Green really is an extremely talented writer (I'm drowning in envy of him) and The Fault In Our Stars is a great example of that talent.

This novel really is a ticking emotional time bomb that seems to blow up every other page; one chapter you can't breathe because you're laughing too hard, and the next you use about a billion tissues to stop the flood of tears that won't stop flowing. Not only is this book full of witty, sarcastic humor and tender, tear-jerking moments, but it contains some surprisingly dark yet insightful themes. Through Hazel, the reader learns the truth about dying, and living as well. This unique perspective isn't often seen in young adult novels, and is in one word, refreshing. Not only that, but Green boldly takes on the soul-stirring questions that people ask themselves: When I die, will anyone remember me? Will I have changed the world? Will I be seen as a hero? A success? A failure?

 I simply love how Green chose to portray death in this book because it's so different than one might expect. People (including me) tend to have this idea that when we die, we'll be ready. That we'll bravely accept our fate and die peacefully, quietly, and gracefully. At least, that's what we want our death to be like. In reality, when death rears its ugly head, people break down and cower before it. Death crushes and rips people apart, physically and mentally, and not just for the one dying. Death, is in one word, ugly.

Even though I tried my best not to pin this book as a stereotypical "cancer book", I still knew I was going to shed some tears by the end. I mean seriously, half the main characters have cancer; something bad is bound to happen, right? So as I was reading, I did attempt to mentally prepare myself for the worst, but let me be the first to tell you; it didn't work. I don't care how "tough" you think you may be. When you finish this book, you're going to need some emotional therapy. And there will be crying. Lots of crying. Overall, this emotional rollercoaster of a book will take you places you never thought to explore, places of tragedy and places of joy. At its core, this novel is about life, death, and the beauty and heartbreak in both.


~Sam