Friday, 15 July 2016

We Choose How to Live (Book Review on Paper Towns and After You)


I have stayed until dawn reading Paper Towns by John Green and last weekend (again), I stayed late to finish After You, the sequel of Me Before You by Jojo Moyes.

Surprise! This is a boring reaction paper on the personality of the two female protagonists and their profound impact on my psyche which makes me incredibly egocentric for always connecting things with my life.

Paper Towns

“Margo always loved mysteries. And in everything that came afterward, I could never stop thinking that maybe she loved mysteries so much she became one.”

Margo is the school’s Barbie doll, that’s what everybody thinks so. Actually, the characterization is a bit cliché – a girl seemingly perfect outside but flawed inside and then, she hops to her perpetual journey of leaving Florida (which she calls paper towns), leaving clues to Quentin (male protagonist and Margo’s  childhood friend) on her whereabouts but later on, it was revealed that she doesn’t want to be found at all. She wanted to be free and alone.; liberated from the expectations and patterns of life – graduating from high school and college, getting a job, building a family, raising kids and growing old. She, with her book of Dickinson , wanted to just live.

She reminds me of a fool, self-centered bitch. She did not care on the consequences of her actions. I mean, leaving without any notice is selfish for whether she likes it or not, there are persons who actually care for her (an ounce of care from her family, a bottomless care from Quentin and his friends) and are willing to ditch their graduation day to find her. They almost lost their lives on their roadtrip but what did they get – “What the hell are you doing here? Where do you get off showing up here without any warning?” with an exclamation mark.

It’s not really her fault, by the way. Quentin misread the clues. He thought those were for him.  and he bought the idea that he is a knight in shining armor that would save a girl he thinks he loves. It was an idea, an idea that surely is only an idea because no one knows Margo except herself.

On a positive note, Margo is fearless. Her wandering and wondering spirit couldn’t be purged and her identity unbent. She said on the last part to Quentin, “We are not different sprouts of the same plant. I can’t be you. You can’t be me.” Sometimes, we play the role of Margo. We are just pulled back by our responsibilities.


After You
Did I warn you not to read this book? Just kidding. As a matter of fact, it’s the book that can get you so depressed but only by reading it, can you be cured. It’s like healthy suicide (Do I deserve a pinch me for that idiotic oxymoron? LOL).

To summarize, After You tells the events after Will Traynor decided to kill himself. Louisa had her share of grief and she couldn’t cope with lost. She worked in a bar, fell on her flat and was hospitalized, recovered, met Lily (unknown daughter of Will), helped Lily out (who turns out to be an impossible case of juvenile delinquency) , fell in love with Sam (paramedic who saved her from her accident) and eventually, flew to New York to work.  

If I were Louisa, I might not recover from Will’s death ever and I won’t let myself fall for another guy. But I am not Louisa. Louisa is a woman who has limitless potentials but no confidence to embark on a new journey. She is terrified of things she has not seen and experienced and she is always putting others happiness and welfare first to the point that she almost wasted a grand career opportunity.

Louisa’s life is pretty sluggish and below mediocre. She did not strive to be the Louisa that Will Traynor had envisioned until the last part. She is on the chronic stage of emotional cancer. Why? Her cells of selflessness have invaded all her system, her mental faculty. I am not saying that selflessness is a bad thing but sometimes, we should also fix ourselves first before we can lend a hand. She was not whole. She was a fragmented soul scattered into multiple dimensions. However, with the help of her lover, Lily, own family and Will’s family and friends from the Moving On Circle, she moved on and finally, got the life she deserves. (Is this the life she really deserves?)

If we compare Louisa and Margo, they are totally unidentical.

Louisa has no sense of adventure. She loves patterns. She likes being different but only in the way she dresses. She is emotionally weak and she is sometimes ignorant. But you know, the irony of it?

“You don’t have to let that one thing be the thing that defines you.” (This is Will’s most unforgettable advice to Louisa.)

Those things don’t define her.

She is Louisa Clark. She is.

She is somebody.


On a final note, these two characters reveal different ways on how to live. We can either succumb or fulfill our duties; we can either stay or run away. But remember, we are not victims of fate. We choose how to live.  

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