My Favorite Books

Adam's books

Looking for Alaska
Bronx Masquerade
Night
Inheritance
Brisingr
Eldest
The Kill Order
The Death Cure
The Scorch Trials
The Maze Runner
Divergent
The Giver
The Red Pyramid
Eragon
The Hobbit
The Sea of Monsters
The Hunger Games
The Lightning Thief
Gregor and the Code of Claw
The Last Olympian


Adam J's favorite books »

Monday, August 10, 2015

Summer Reading "Looking For Alaska" Entry Four

I would say so myself that I am familiar with the author John Green and on the list of books for summer reading when I saw the option Looking for Alaska I knew that John Green cant write anything that I would not enjoy. I have some friends that were finished with their summer reading before I had even started and they all read Looking for Alaska and I did not believe that it could have been a coincidence that the book they all said was amazing was written by John Green and I had previous thoughts of reading it. After reading I thought the book was outstanding. It was difficult to connect to because it is the opposite of who I am and what i believe in but it was so awesome to see from a different perspective the fearless kids that do not worry about getting expelled or in trouble and do crazy things like smoke and pull huge pranks and using loopholes in the rules to only get in trouble rather than expelled. Any reader that is ok with adultery and likes the drama of twisted and insane teens in love would definitely love this book (of course you also need to be at a mature age to read this book as well as it does have vulgar language and acts in the novel).

Summer Reading "Looking For Alaska" Entry Three

Hooking the readers in this novel almost was not noticeable and John Green makes it seem like he intended us readers to get hooked without us knowing that we are getting hooked. (WARNING LONG PARAGRAPH/QUOTE INCOMING) John Green makes it look easy to hook readers by instantly introducing a conflict instantly. He introduces "Weekday Warriors"; another tool to hook readers by introducing them to knew slang or terminology that is used throughout the story. "She laughed. 'Oh God no. I've maybe read a third of em. But i'm going to read them all. I call it my Life's Library. Every summer since i was little, I've gone to garage sales and bought all the books that looked interesting. So I always have something to read, But there is so much to do: cigarettes to smoke, sex to have, swings to swing on. I'll have more time for reading when i'm old and boring.'... 'a shared interest in booze and mischief'" (page 20). What John Green did here was he hooked us by giving us a future for the character Alaska that we want to see play out as well as promising a good story with adultery and mischief, things all people like. Below is a link to "6 ways to hook a reader" which describes in other words what I said John Green has done above, he introduces an interesting character, he gives a future for Alaska (A pivotal moment as described in the link), he has a compelling narrative voice, as well as an unusual situation which is a boy going to boarding school and meeting out of the ordinary people.

http://writeitsideways.com/6-ways-to-hook-your-readers-from-the-very-first-line/

Summer Reading "Looking For Alaska" Entry 2

Pudge, the main character, may be seen and most of the time is simple. Most of what he says is what he means, he is not metaphorical and you understand everything he says. What makes pudge complex is the love life he lives as he loves one girl and dates another, constantly flirting with the woman he loves but dates and interacts with the woman he dates. Alaska, the woman pudge is in love with, is the most complex character I have ever been introduced to in a novel. She never once in the entire book says, thinks, or admits her love for Pudge. She flirts with him constantly, has many love scenes with Pudge, and even gets intimate with him. She says throughout the story "I love my boyfriend" who let me clarify is not Pudge. She keeps so many dark secrets to herself and her friends (Pudge, The Colonel, and Takumi) do not learn most of them except that her mothers death is her fault and her father blames her. Alaska speaks in metaphor almost 100% of the time and even develops the theme herself with her suffering which is "How do I get out of the Labyrinth" a question that gets answered by Alaska, of course, in a figure of speech. Takumi who the reader does not know until about the last page of the book, also loves Alaska. Takumi is pretty simple in that he is at Culver Creek, he is friends with the 3 others, and he goes along with every rule and prank the four of them create. The book is structured in first person in Pudges' perspective. This making understanding Alaska's metaphors and poetic speeches nonetheless more difficult. John Green gives us Pudges' thoughts and perceptions making him a more simple character because we understand everything he does. Well I am guessing everyone is dieing to know the answer or even know what the heck "How do I get out of the Labyrinth" Even means but as Alaska answers it, the Labyrinth is not life or death, but it is suffering. And a somewhat of a (SPOILER ALERT) suicide note she writes next to the question "Straight and fast". This being relevant because how she dies is in a car accident described by an officer as "She didnt swerve, and sped up directly into the stationary truck". Below is a link to a summation to "The Labyrinth" so you can better understand what the labyrinth is as Alaska created this them by pulling the quote out of another book (I know, a book inside a book, its weird).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_General_in_His_Labyrinth

Summer Reading "Looking For Alaska" Entry One

Looking for Alaska has several some simple and some complex characters. While in the title Looking for Alaska; Alaska is not even the main character, although she does play a major role in the book. Miles "Pudge" Halter, the main character, appears a simple character although can be seen as complex throughout the book with twists and changes to who he is. Honestly after reading the book I would have been totally for Alaska being the main character because personally I thought Alaska was a way more interesting character (obviously speaking she is way more complex than the other characters). So Pudge is the skinny self-conscious boy who is literally completely opposite to Alaska the outgoing beautiful and open girl. The two characters who are what hold Pudge and Alaska together are Chip "The Colonel" Martin and Takumi. The Colonel was the one to introduce Pudge to Alaska and Alaska introduced Pudge to Takumi. The Colonel and Takumi are pretty easy to understand and the book obviously revolves around Alaska and Pudge. These four are in boarding school together at "Culver Creek High" which is a dormitory school located at a lake, a symbolic and important location for the four characters. The conflict in this story being that Pudge who had no friends at his previous high school wants to make friends at Culver Creek and was accepted by The Colonel. Throughout the book Pudge learns about the other characters and tries to have a better social life than at the previous high school he attended. Comparing this book to other works is difficult because this is one of the first drama books I have read but I can say that this love story relates to other works in that the love they share can not be expressed to each other because Alaska is in a relationship already. In this short video hyper linked below John Green, the author of Looking For Alaska tells the readers how these characters came to be and in general how to book came to be.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0pz5g5FP0g