There aren’t a lot of books I’ve read that make me think like that one did. That book was so profound and so…real. I loved it.
My mom, after finishing The Fault in Our Stars by John Green (via andhereicome)
“We have bottled all the stars this evening…” - John Green

some things you may have not known about The Fault In Our Stars
- Augustus’ name symbolizes water. obviously, there is a lot of water in the book, it is nourishing and reviving and it symbolizes the doctors taking away the water out of Hazel’s lungs
- the reason why Augustus always calls hazel, “Hazel Grace” is because in one point of the book Hazel tells him that she likes people with two names, so simultaneously Augustus calls her, Hazel Grace.
- On the plane when they are watching 300, Augustus’ movie starts and ends first, and it foreshadows his death.
- Isaac (according to John Green) was not named Isaac because his eyes are sick, ha ha ha, but because in other references, Isaac’s are old men who live to tell the tale’s of star crossed lovers and other heroic adventures.
- In one point of the book, Gus says to Hazel “You used to call me Augustus”. Basically, Augustus is a strong name, it’s healthy and stable. Hazel, without even realizing it, starts calling him Gus, which is weaker and more unstable when he tells her of his cancer.
- Augustus and Anne Frank have very similar coincidences. He had cancer and he underwent an operation to hopefully cure him of his cancer, only to die. And Anne Frank went into hiding with the hope of being free, but ended up dying. And it’s also not a coincidence that they made out in the Anne Frank house.
(Source: lanadalrays)
“That’s the thing about pain,” Augustus said, and then glanced back at me. “It demands to be felt.”
(Source: hazelgracious)

“I know so many last words. But I will never know hers.”
the fault in our stars more like stab me repeatedly in the chest
sometimes it lasts in love but sometimes Augustus Waters dies
(Source: dream-within-a-dream)




