Analysis Of Looking For Alaska By John Green

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I am positively in love with books. I love the feeling that I am having a conversation with the author. One of my favorite books, Looking for Alaska by John Green, generates that emotion every time I open it. Its ambiguous nature allows me to discover something new each time, like I am uncovering a new layer of a dear friend with every turn of the page. The novel is told from the perspective of Miles Halter (known in the story as Pudge) as he seeks his great adventure in an out-of-state boarding school. He finds it in Alaska Young, a headstrong, impulsive, messed-up girl who is best friends with his roommate. She has a history of a bad relationship with her father, cheating on her boyfriends, and she is often drinking alcohol and/or smoking a cigarette. She dies while driving drunk halfway through the novel. The plot then shifts to the question …show more content…

When Alaska is first introduced to Pudge one of the first impressions he has of her is how many books she owns. She explains that the collection has been growing every summer since she was a child, and she plans to read all of them when she is too old to go on any more adventures of her own (Green 20). Alaska spends very little time in the novel talking about the past, and spends a lot of time in the present and future. When there was a problem, or unwelcome situation she was able to raise a small army of friends to follow along with her. The only time she felt trapped was when she realized she had forgotten her mother’s death. But she acted quickly and left to take flowers to her mother’s grave (Green 132). Because she was intoxicated her driving was impaired and her adrenaline got to her. When two cars got in her way, she tried to get around them (Green 211). She was incapable of knowing it would cause a fatal collision, she just knew that she never let anything stand in her

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