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Looking for Alaska
Looking for Alaska
John Green | 2013 | Children
9
8.1 (49 Ratings)
Book Rating
Interesting plot (1 more)
It's John green...
Intriguing
Another of John Green, this author is sensational. I've almost read his entire collection, turtles all the way down is next. Back to looking for Alaska, well, this book was very descriptive, it was really easy to follow and all of the characters are very likeable. A great young adult book. The book takes a dramatic twist and gets quite serious and emotional. It was very hard to put this book down! John has a way of writing where it's almost impossible to put his books down.
  
Turtles All The Way Down
Turtles All The Way Down
John Green | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
9
8.4 (60 Ratings)
Book Rating
Storyline, lessons about people and life (0 more)
Nothing really. (0 more)
Another John Green fave
Green does an excellent job writing a believale female protagonist who struggles with her mental health. If you like his other books, you'll like this one too. I enjoyed reading it. I was laughing and crying throughout most of it.
  
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MyBookObsession (29 KP) created a poll

Sep 6, 2017  
Poll
 Anonymous
Vote which ones are your favourites (You can vote for them all.. I probably would)

Me before you ~ jojo Moyes

8 votes

If I stay ~ Gayle Forman

3 votes

The fault in our stars ~ John green

7 votes

Ps. I love you ~ Cecelia Ahern

6 votes

Vote
     
Turtles All The Way Down
Turtles All The Way Down
John Green | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
10
8.4 (60 Ratings)
Book Rating
Mental Health Issues (3 more)
Plot
Characters
Quoteable
It ended (0 more)
John Green Does It Again
I will start off by saying that I love John Green. His books have always been a favorite of mine. Looking For Alaska is a book I will gravitate towards over and over again. He has such a great writing style with the most beautiful quotes. I can't get over it if we're being honest.
Mental health is a big and important topic. With something so big comes a lot of responsibility when writing about it. John Green nails it. The way he talks about Aza's OCD and how he describes her thought processes is amazing. You really start to bond with the character and feel for her. BUT, not only do you feel for her, you get frustrated with her because you start to get invested. The way that she navigates her life, her thoughts, her relationships, her everything is so well thought out by John.
I think this book has started a lot of really important conversations. People are talking about OCD. How to cope with someone who has OCD. How to cope with having it yourself. How to seek help and know that there ARE great resources out there that people don't know about. Best of all, it's helping to take away the awful stigma that seems to be attached to mental illness and mental health.
Thank you, John Green. Your books bring me peace.
  
The Fault in Our Stars
The Fault in Our Stars
John Green | 2012 | Children
9
8.2 (185 Ratings)
Book Rating
Tissues handy
A great YA fictional book that hits you in the feels over and over. Very well written and is one of those books you can read cover to cover. Even if that means no sleep. Every book I have read from John Green has been fantastic!
  
Will Grayson, Will Grayson
Will Grayson, Will Grayson
John Green | 2012 | Children
10
8.3 (18 Ratings)
Book Rating
Brilliant novel, slightly confusing to read on my kindle app on my phone as there was no way to distinguish between the two chapters - it took me a while to understand what was happening! But I absolutely loved it and would definitely recommend it - along with most other John Green books!
  
Turtles All The Way Down
Turtles All The Way Down
John Green | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
9
8.4 (60 Ratings)
Book Rating
Excellent descriptions of mental illness (1 more)
Unique main character
Same essential plot as all of John Green's books (0 more)
Another excellent book from John Green
So what the cover description of this book doesn't explicitly mention is that Aza, the main character, has a pretty severe anxiety disorder. That's really the core topic of the book - her thought spirals and dealing with life while caught in them. I trust John Green to write about these because he also suffers from severe anxiety. He's talked about it in interviews and on his vlogbrothers Youtube channel. (I'm a big Green brothers fan - what's known as a nerdfighter.) So when John Green writes a character with anxiety, I believe that it's a realistic portrayal. I loved the integration of technology in the story - two characters don't just text each other, the text conversation is on the page, formatted differently, so it's obvious these are text messages. I always love books that do that.

There's not a whole lot I can say about the book without giving things away; a lot of John Green's characters tend to wax eloquently about philosophy and things outside themselves, and Aza doesn't do that because she's so trapped within her own thoughts. She can't think of the future or existential dread because she's too worried about the microbes in her stomach getting out of control and giving her diseases. Definitely a departure from his usual story, though it does fit his standard MO of Main character meets other character who profoundly changes main character's life in some way. (There's a third part that is also consistent with most of John Green's novels but it's a spoiler.)

I think the book is a really good book for anyone who loves someone with anxiety. Or even for those who have anxiety themselves, to see that they're not alone.

You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com
  
Turtles All The Way Down
Turtles All The Way Down
John Green | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
10
8.4 (60 Ratings)
Book Rating
Plot (5 more)
Characters
Dialogue
Fandom Representation
Use of Fanfiction
Honest Portrayal of Mental Health Issues
This book blew me away, I honestly wasn't sure what to expect but I was pleasantly surprised. The way John Green portrayed mental health was brutally honest. It was hard to read at some points but it was refreshing not to have a YA book romanticize mental illness but instead to show it from all sides: the way it affects familial relationships; the way it affects friendships; the way it affects romantic relationships and how easy and scary it is when your thoughts spiral out of control.

I loved reading about Aza and how she navigates through her friendships, new relationships and dealing with OCD. I have so much respect for John Green after reading this. It was very well done, and the Star Wars references were an added bonus!
  
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Chris Hooker (419 KP) rated Solitaire in Books

Jan 12, 2018  
Solitaire
Solitaire
10
8.5 (2 Ratings)
Book Rating
[Solitaire] is one of those books that came across my feed as "We Think You Might Like". It was compared to John Green and Rainbow Rowell. I will agree with that but British, definately British. It has lots of unexpected twists and turns and is written so well you get through the book in no time. The fact that I was kept guessing until almost the end was amazing.
  
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Kat (3 KP) rated Turtles All The Way Down in Books

Jan 30, 2018 (Updated Jan 30, 2018)  
Turtles All The Way Down
Turtles All The Way Down
John Green | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
9
8.4 (60 Ratings)
Book Rating
Very honest portrayal of mental issues (1 more)
The characters were written in a believable way
This was my first experience reading a John Green book and I was not disappointed. It had some many good written moments, the story flowed wonderfully, and it didn't end in the stereotypical way I had expected it would.

Green's portrayal of mental issues was spot on and he did nothing to romanticize them. He expressed them in a real, raw way that I appreciated.
  
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Kaz4ray (17 KP) Jan 30, 2018

I’m about half way through this and loving it!