The Fault In Our Stars Figurative Language Essay

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“The fault, dear Brutus is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings” (Julius Caesar.) This line was the inspiration behind the title of John Green’s Novel, “The Fault in Our Stars”. The novel shows the life of eighteen year old Hazel Grace Lancaster, a stage four thyroid cancer patient, who makes the acquaintance of Augustus Waters one dreadful day at support group. Throughout the novel, Hazel not only takes a physical journey but an emotional one. In “The Fault in Our Stars” Green uses characterization, figurative language and setting to show the ups and downs of Hazel’s journey, by examining how to take the struggles in life and make the nest out of them. Hazel endures a physical journey greater than most. At the age of thirteen, she was …show more content…

They could go about whining and moping over what occurred, but instead they make the best of what they have. The structure of the text also helps communicate the theme by expressing a story in which a heartbreaking event is turned into resilient love. John Green possibly wrote the novel for the very purpose to express the theme of love conquers all, and to live your life to the fullest. Finally, many question as to why Green chose the title he did, The Fault in Our Stars. In a letter to Augustus, Van Houten writes, “Never was Shakespeare more wrong then when he had Cassius note, ‘the fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars/ But in ourselves.’” This is where Green almost positively developed the title from for, as Van Houten states, there are plenty of faults to be found amid our stars. The title also helps describe the theme, we don’t choose what life deals, but we do choose how to deal with it, it’s the fault in our stars. In

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