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“The World is Not a Wish-Granting Factory”
I just read a really good book. The Fault is in Our Stars by John Green. I highly recommend it to anyone who likes YA Lit. The title of this post is a quote that was used several times in the story, and while my life sufferings do not come close those of Hazel Grace and Augustus Waters, it’s a quote that keeps coming back to me.
“The world is not a wish-granting factory.” The 16 and 17 year old characters from the book were both suffering from what Hazel calls “a symptom of dying” which is cancer. Their world really should have been a wish-granting factory, but it wasn’t.
My world is not so tough. It’s quite good, actually. But sometimes, I do wish I had a wish-granting factory. I would use it for good, of course. Help those in need and all. Also, I would be a little selfish, as I’m sure most of us would.
Maybe that’s why the world is not a wish granting factory. The world wants us to work for our wishes, so when we get them it’s because we earned them. And if we don’t get them in the end, well, I guess that just means someone else deserved it m
Looking for some famous quotes from The Fault In Our Stars? We have rounded up the best collection of The Fault In Our Stars quotes, sayings, messages, lines, and status, (with images and pictures) that will inspire you to live a happy and fulfilling life despite the flaws in your destiny.
The Fault in Our Stars is a famous young-adult novel by author John Green published in 2012 that was adapted into a movie directed by Josh Boone in 2014.
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The title of the novel is inspired by Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar where Cassius says “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, / But in ourselves, that we are underlings.”
The story is about two cancer-stricken teenagers Hazel and Gus, who fall in love with each other.
Hazel is a 16-year-old lady who is forced by her parents to attend a help group where she meets Augustus, who also is a cancer survivor.
Both of them relate to each other and strike a bond of love and fondness for each other with day. However, fate has something else stored for them when Gus’s health worsens and he dies due to cancer.
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This leaves Hazel heartbr
The Fault in Our Stars Quotes
10 Quotes from ‘The Fault In Our Stars’ That Will Break Your Heart
There’s something about seriously sad movies that just drives a dagger of love and passion into our souls. Especially if they’re adapted from a best-selling book, as is “The Fault in Our Stars.” The words John Green wrote left an indelible mark on every teenager — and most adults — who’ve read them.
In my review, I wrote: “‘The Fault In Our Stars’ doesn’t shy away from the inevitable harshness of life with cancer and never lets us forget that it’s possible to fall madly, deeply in love, even when that person you love is dying. As Hazel’s favorite book notes, ‘Pain demands to be felt,’ and you will feel pain while watching ‘The Fault In Our Stars.’ I guess that’s not a bad message to offer both kids and grownups. That you can feel pain and somehow find a way to live with it. That somehow, it’ll be okay.”
While perhaps not all of our favorite quotes from the book made it into the movie, many of them did, as noted by the wild applause in the theater every time a character said a treasured line. Here are ten quo
“As he read, I fell in love the way you fall asleep: slowly, and then all at once.”
Hazel (p.125)
Hazel, usually incredibly rational for an adolescent, especially in the case of fending off Augustus's romantic advances, thinks this when Augustus reads to her from her favorite book after placing the post about the swing set. Hazel is not completely sold, however, keeping her love secret from Gus and denying him both a kiss in the park and a return "I love you" on the airplane to Amsterdam. This internal conflict between love and safety is turned on its head when Augustus becomes sick, and Hazel eventually realizes that it may be better to allow oneself to fall into love, like in this quote, even at the chance (or certainty) of being hurt.
“Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book.”
Hazel (p.33)
The nature of books themselves is major theme in The Fault in Our Stars, giving the book a meta-fictional sense. Based on the rave reviews Green's book has received, The Fault in Our Stars may be one such book that