Book Resume
for The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
Professional book information and credentials for The Fault in Our Stars.
8 Professional Reviews (5 Starred)
11 Book Awards
Selected for 56 State/Province Lists
See full Book Resume
on TeachingBooks
Diagnosed with stage IV thyroid cancer when she was thirteen, Hazel rallied against ...read more
- School Library Journal:
- Grades 9 and up
- Publisher's Weekly:
- Ages 14 and up
- Kirkus:
- Ages 15 and up
- Booklist:
- Grades 9 - 12
- TeachingBooks:*
- Grades 7-12
- Word Count:
- 65,752
- Lexile Level:
- 850L
- ATOS Reading Level:
- 5.5
- Genre:
- Realistic Fiction
- Year Published:
- 2012
12 Subject Headings
The following 12 subject headings were determined by the U.S. Library of Congress and the Book Industry Study Group (BISAC) to reveal themes from the content of this book (The Fault in Our Stars).
- Young Adult Fiction | Romance | Contemporary
- Young Adult Fiction | Social Themes | Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance
- Love--Fiction
- Cancer
- Terminally ill
- Love stories
- Cancer--Fiction
- Cancer in adolescence
- Love
- Terminally ill--Fiction
- Young Adult Fiction | Social Themes | Death, Grief, Bereavement
- Young Adult Fiction
8 Full Professional Reviews (5 Starred)
The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.
Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Diagnosed with stage IV thyroid cancer when she was thirteen, Hazel rallied against the odds, although she’s still terminally ill. Hazel meets Gus, who had a leg amputated due to osteosarcoma but is currently cancer-free, at a support group for teens with cancer. They share a smart, sassy, darkly humorous outlook on the group itself, and life with cancer. Hazel’s favorite book is a novel about Anna, a teen with cancer. She appreciates it for its honesty but obsesses over the way it ends, mid-sentence. The author, who lives in the Netherlands, has never responded to her letters asking what happened to Anna and the other characters, and so Gus uses his request from a foundation granting wishes for kids with cancer to take Hazel to Amsterdam to meet him. That meeting is a dismal disappointment. But while there, Hazel and Gus’s relationship advances from friendship to love, and Gus reveals that his cancer has returned. Hazel and Gus are two exceptionally articulate teens, but if author John Green’s adolescent characters aren’t wholly realistic, their struggles are authentic, from Hazel’s fears about how her parents will deal with her eventual death to Gus’s unromanticized decline, which ends with him dying. Hazel and Gus’s dialogue is witty and entertaining—it’s enjoyable spending time with them—but also revealing of the issues they and their families are grappling with. The parents of both teens are well-developed secondary characters, while a visit to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam offers a richly resonant connection to another teen falling in love and fighting to survive. (Age 12 and older)
CCBC Choices 2013 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2013. Used with permission.
From Horn Book
July 1, 2012
Green's fourth solo novel is a lot of things: acerbic comedy, sexy romance, and a lightly played, extended meditation on life and death. Narrator Hazel, controlling stage four cancer, is the most multi-dimensional yet of John Green Girls. She may not be able to change the course of her stars, but she navigates their heartbreaking directives with humor, honesty, and--she'd deny it--grace.
(Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
From Horn Book
Starred review from March 1, 2012
I suppose this is a cancer book, but as its inimitable heroine Hazel would say, "It's not a cancer book, because cancer books suck." Evoking yet transcending such teen-illness classics as Paige Dixon's May I Cross Your Golden River? (rev. 2/76) and Alice Bach's Waiting for Johnny Miracle, John Green's fourth solo novel, and first to be narrated by a girl, is a lot of things: acerbic comedy, sexy romance, and a lightly played, extended meditation on the big questions about life and death. Hazel is controlling her stage four cancer "with the assistance of drizzled oxygen and daily Phalanxifor" -- she has time, but no one knows how much. Augustus Waters, handsome and dashing, lost a leg to osteosarcoma but now seems okay. Their quickly developing (terminal illness giving new meaning to the question, "why wait?") romance is as intellectual as it is physical and emotional, and Green's fans will recognize and enjoy the heady badinage between the two. They will also appreciate the presence of sidekick Isaac, soon to be blind from eye cancer but a generous sharer of friendship as well as of the blackest of jokes. Hazel, the most multi-dimensional yet of John Green Girls, may not be able to change the course of her stars, but she navigates their heartbreaking directives with humor, honesty, and -- while she would probably deny it -- grace. roger sutton
(Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
From School Library Journal
Starred review from February 1, 2012
Gr 9 Up-"It's not fair," complains 16-year-old Hazel from Indiana. "The world," says Gus, her new friend from her teen support group, "is not a wish-granting factory." Indeed, life is not fair; Hazel and Gus both have cancer, Hazel's terminal. Despite this, she has a burning obsession: to find out what happens to the characters after the end of her favorite novel. An Imperial Affliction by Dutch author Peter Van Houten is about a girl named Anna who has cancer, and it ends in mid-sentence (presumably to indicate a life cut short), a stylistic choice that Hazel appreciates but the ambiguity drives her crazy. Did the "Dutch Tulip Man" marry Anna's mom? What happened to Sisyphus the Hamster? Hazel asks her questions via email and Van Houten responds, claiming that he can only tell her the answers in person. When she was younger, Hazel used her wish-one granted to sick children from The Genie Foundation-by going to Disney World. Gus decides to use his to take Hazel to Amsterdam to meet the author. Like most things in life, the trip doesn't go exactly as anticipated. Van Houten is a disappointment, but Hazel, who has resisted loving Gus because she doesn't want to be the grenade that explodes in his life when she dies, finally allows herself to love. Once again Green offers a well-developed cast of characters capable of both reflective thought and hilarious dialogue. With his trademark humor, lovable parents, and exploration of big-time challenges, The Fault in Our Stars is an achingly beautiful story about life and loss.-Ragan O'Malley, Saint Ann's School, Brooklyn, NY
Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
From Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from January 16, 2012
If there's a knock on John Green (and it's more of a light tap considering he's been recognized twice by the Printz committee) it's that he keeps writing the same book: nerdy guy in unrequited love with impossibly gorgeous girl, add road trip. His fourth novel departs from that successful formula to even greater success: this is his best work yet. Narrator Hazel Grace Lancaster, 16, is (miraculously) alive thanks to an experimental drug that is keeping her thyroid cancer in check. In an effort to get her to have a life (she withdrew from school at 13), her parents insist she attend a support group at a local church, which Hazel characterizes in an older-than-her-years voice as a "rotating cast of characters in various states of tumor-driven unwellness." Despite Hazel's reluctant presence, it's at the support group that she meets Augustus Waters, a former basketball player who has lost a leg to cancer. The connection is instant, and a (doomed) romance blossoms. There is a road tripâÂ"Augustus, whose greatest fear is not of death but that his life won't amount to anything, uses his "Genie Foundation" wish to take Hazel to Amsterdam to meet the author of her favorite book. Come to think of it, Augustus is pretty damn hot. So maybe there's not a new formula at work so much as a gender swap. But this iteration is smart, witty, profoundly sad, and full of questions worth asking, even those like "Why me?" that have no answer. Ages 14âÂ"up. Agent: Jodi Reamer, Writers House.
From Kirkus
Starred review from January 15, 2012
He's in remission from the osteosarcoma that took one of his legs. She's fighting the brown fluid in her lungs caused by tumors. Both know that their time is limited. Sparks fly when Hazel Grace Lancaster spies Augustus "Gus" Waters checking her out across the room in a group-therapy session for teens living with cancer. He's a gorgeous, confident, intelligent amputee who always loses video games because he tries to save everyone. She's smart, snarky and 16; she goes to community college and jokingly calls Peter Van Houten, the author of her favorite book, An Imperial Affliction, her only friend besides her parents. He asks her over, and they swap novels. He agrees to read the Van Houten and she agrees to read his--based on his favorite bloodbath-filled video game. The two become connected at the hip, and what follows is a smartly crafted intellectual explosion of a romance. From their trip to Amsterdam to meet the reclusive Van Houten to their hilariously flirty repartee, readers will swoon on nearly every page. Green's signature style shines: His carefully structured dialogue and razor-sharp characters brim with genuine intellect, humor and desire. He takes on Big Questions that might feel heavy handed in the words of any other author: What do oblivion and living mean? Then he deftly parries them with humor: "My nostalgia is so extreme that I am capable of missing a swing my butt never actually touched." Dog-earing of pages will no doubt ensue. Green seamlessly bridges the gap between the present and the existential, and readers will need more than one box of tissues to make it through Hazel and Gus' poignant journey. (Fiction. 15 & up)
COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
From Booklist
Starred review from January 1, 2012
Grades 9-12 *Starred Review* At 16, Hazel Grace Lancaster, a three-year stage IVcancer survivor, is clinically depressed. To help her deal with this, her doctor sends her to a weekly support group where she meets Augustus Waters, a fellow cancer survivor, and the two fall in love. Both kids are preternaturally intelligent, and Hazel is fascinated with a novel about cancer called An Imperial Affliction. Most particularly, she longs to know what happened to its characters after an ambiguous ending. To find out, the enterprising Augustus makes it possible for them to travel to Amsterdam, where Imperial's author, an expatriate American, lives. What happens when they meet him must be left to readers to discover. Suffice it to say, it is significant. Writing about kids with cancer is an invitation to sentimentality and pathosor worse, in unskilled hands, bathos. Happily, Green is able to transcend such pitfalls in his best and most ambitious novel to date. Beautifully conceived and executed, this story artfully examines the largest possible considerationslife, love, and deathwith sensitivity, intelligence, honesty, and integrity. In the process, Green shows his readers what it is like to live with cancer, sometimes no more than a breath or a heartbeat away from death. But it is life that Green spiritedly celebrates here, even while acknowledging its pain. In its every aspect, this novel is a triumph. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Green's promotional genius is a force of nature. After announcing he would sign all 150,000 copies of this title's first print run, it shot to the top of Amazon and Barnes & Noble's best-seller lists six months before publication.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)
From AudioFile Magazine
It's a testament to John Green's writing and Kate Rudd's narration that, in a book about teenagers with cancer, there are still plenty of laugh-out-loud moments. Green's teens are precocious and clever, and Rudd sells it, delivering every "or whatever" with perfect teenage inflection and fully inhabiting protagonist Hazel as she navigates the world with lungs ravaged by cancer. When Hazel has trouble breathing, we hear it in the way Rudd gasps and pants between words. It's a sad, funny, smart, beautiful book--listeners won't be able to help speculating about what's coming and may even wish they could fast-forward to find out, even as they hang on every word. J.M.D. (c) AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
11 Book Awards & Distinctions
The Fault in Our Stars was recognized by committees of professional librarians and educators for the following book awards and distinctions.
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Amelia Elizabeth Walden Award, 2009-2024, Winner, 2013
Best Fiction for Young Adults, 2011-2024, Selection, 2013
CCBC Choices, Selection, 2013
Indies Choice Book Awards, 2009-2019, Winner, 2013
Kids’ Book Choice Awards, 2008-2022, Winner, 2013
Odyssey Award, 2008-2025, Winner, 2013
Horn Book Fanfare, 2001-2024, Selection, 2012
Junior Library Guild Selections, 2012-2025, Young Adult Selection, 2012
Publishers Weekly Best Books, 2010-2024, Fiction Selection, 2012
SLJ Best Books of the Year, 2010 - 2024, Selection, 2012
YALSA Teens' Top Ten, 2003-2023, Winner, 2012
56 Selections for State & Provincial Recommended Reading Lists
The Fault in Our Stars was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.
Canada Lists (2)
Alberta
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
British Columbia
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
United States Lists (54)
Alaska
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
Arizona
- Grand Canyon Reader Award, 2014 -- Teen category
Arkansas
- Arkansas Teen Book Award, 2013-2014
California
- California Young Reader Medal, 2014-2015, Young Adult Division
Colorado
- Colorado Blue Spruce Young Adult Book Award, 2014
- Colorado Blue Spruce Young Adult Book Award, 2015 -- Grades 7-12
Delaware
- Blue Hen Book Award, 2014 -- Teen Readers
Florida
- Florida Teens Read, 2013-2014
Georgia
- Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers, 2013-2014
- Helen Ruffin Reading Bowl, 2013-2014, for Grades 9-12
Idaho
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
Illinois
- Abraham Lincoln High School Award, 2014, for Grades 9-12
Indiana
- Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award, 2013-2014
- Indiana State Library Book Kits, 2024
- Titles Set in Indiana
Iowa
- Iowa High School Battle of the Books, 2015, Grades 9-12
- Iowa High School Book Award, 2013-2014, Grades 9-12
Kentucky
- 2013 Kentucky Bluegrass Award--High School
Louisiana
- Louisiana Teen Readers' Choice Award, 2015, Grades 9-12
Maryland
- Black-Eyed Susan Book Award, 2013-2014, High School
Michigan
- Great Lakes Great Books Award, 2013-2014, Grades 9-12
- Thumbs Up! Award, 1987-2024, for Grades 7-12
Missouri
- Gateway Readers Award, 2014-2015, Grades 9-12
Montana
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
Nevada
- Nevada Young Readers' Award, 2014 -- Young Adult Division
New Hampshire
- The Flume, 2014: NH Teen Reader's Choice Award, Grades 9-12
New Jersey
- Garden State Teen Book Awards, 2015 -- High School Fiction for Grades 9-12
New York
- Teen 3 Apples Book Award, 2013, Grades 7-12
- Teen 3 Apples Book Award, 2017, Teens, Grades 7-12
North Carolina
- NCSLMA YA Book Award, 2012-2013 -- High School
Ohio
- Teen Buckeye Book Award, 2013
- Teen Buckeye Book Award, 2014
Oklahoma
- Sequoyah Book Awards, 2015 -- High School
Oregon
- Oregon Battle of the Books, 2014, Grades 9-12
- Oregon Reader's Choice Award, 2015 -- High School Division
Pennsylvania
- KSRA Young Adult Book Award, 2013-2014 -- High School List
- Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award, 2012-2013, Grades 9-12
Rhode Island
- Rhode Island Teen Book Award, 2014
South Carolina
- SCASL Young Adult Book Awards, 2013-2014, Grades 9-12
South Dakota
- Young Adult Reading Program, 2013-2014 -- High School, Grades 9-12
Tennessee
- Volunteer State Book Awards, 2013-2014 --High School Division
Texas
- Tayshas Reading List, 2013, for Grades 9-12
Utah
- Beehive Award, 2013-2014, Young Adult, Grades 7-12
Vermont
- Green Mountain Book Award, 2013-2014, Grades 9-12
Virginia
- Virginia Readers' Choice, 2013-2014, High School
Washington
- Evergreen Young Adult Book Award, 2015, Grades 7-12
- Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award, 2015, Senior Division
Wisconsin
- 2012-13 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades 9-12
- 2012-2013 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades PK-12
- Battle of the Books, 2012-2013 -- Senior Division
- Golden Archer Award, 2015 -- Middle/Junior High Category, for Grades 6-9
- Read On Wisconsin Book Club Selections for Sept. 2012
Wyoming
- Soaring Eagle Book Award, 2012-2013, Grades 7-12
- Soaring Eagle Book Award, 2014-2015, Grades 7-12
Primary Source Statement on Creating The Fault in Our Stars
John Green on creating The Fault in Our Stars:
This primary source recording with John Green was created to provide readers insights directly from the book's creator into the backstory and making of this book.
Listen to this recording on TeachingBooks
Citation: Green, John. "Meet-the-Author Recording | The Fault in Our Stars." TeachingBooks, https://school.teachingbooks.net/bookResume/t/28782. Accessed 31 January, 2025.
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This Book Resume for The Fault in Our Stars is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.
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