3. Personal Growth | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post
Arts Entertainment

5 Reasons Why You Should Read 'Looking For Alaska'— If You Haven't Already

To the young adult book that I truly needed and will never forget.

2053
5 Reasons Why You Should Read 'Looking For Alaska'— If You Haven't Already
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Looking_for_alaska_in_streets_of_goa.jpg

In This Article:

As a kid, I never found myself reading a lot. All the other kids were getting into books that were so fictional or dramatic that I couldn't follow the storyline. I never knew what I really liked as I had not explored a whole bunch, but I knew something more relatable in a sense or something from an author with a good writing style would be closer to my taste. Little did I know what was to come.

1. The Fault in Our Stars

Remember that one book John Green is especially popular for? That heartbreak love story bound for all eternity? Yeah, I read that before it became a movie or was even spoken about, thanks to my seventh grade English teacher. It was something I could follow, get into, but wasn't quite the direction I was wanting. I didn't need some sappy love story to save me, I needed a true heartbreak, one that could make me feel ice cold before recovering back to reality. The Fault In Our Stars was something I didn't ever expect to get into, but for middle school me, it got me reading again. If you think The Fault in our Stars was great, pick up a copy of Looking for Alaska and get reading. Now.

2. Reading, reading, and more reading

Like stated before, I have always had a hard time finding a book to get into. Some can read book after book and enjoy it even if it's not amazing in their eyes. I wish I had that point of view. For me, I must really be able to dive into the characters, see from that omniscient viewpoint. This book made it as if I was a friend of theirs, tagging along with every late-night adventure.

3. Personal Growth

I think the personal tragedy (I'm trying so hard not to include spoilers) and loss of self is a feeling beyond what can be put into words. John Green, in all his glory, did exactly that. At this time in my life, being in eighth grade for my first read, I think this really helped me step out of my personal issues at the time and think fully about this book. I started to understand things in the world a bit better and continued to keep this on my mind and the events that happened after the event. I grew around this storyline, relating events to things in my life with such pain and sorrow. There was more personal growth and development than I intended. I learned a way to heal from wounds, and I learned to keep going. Is that something I ever expected from a fictional group of friends? Never.

4. Reality check!

Although Looking for Alaska has some adult topics like sex and alcohol, I think it is a reality check at any age. I read this book for the first time when I was 13, and it still hit home. I can still read it now, five years later, and feel the story in the same ways, if not more. Don't go into this thinking it is some censored children's book, it has a much more important role in the world of novels.

Mental health, finally hitting the spotlight

One last, very important, note is the mental health issues in this book. Whether you notice it or not, something is always stirring. This book portrays the blindness to what can be going on underneath the surface that I think everyone could learn from reading about. Mental health is a rather large issue in our world today, and this book does not fail in that category. The feeling of disorientation once it is evident, and feeling like nothing can be done the same way again.

Overall, not everyone will fall in love with this book as much as I have, but I am passionate about the role it plays for young readers, opening up the dialogue to harder subjects and broadening the horizon for young minds. Read it or not, I think we all grow in our own ways. For me, I lived through the experiences of these young teenagers, relating in such abstract ways. May we all still be Looking for Alaska.

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
ross geller
YouTube

As college students, we are all familiar with the horror show that is course registration week. Whether you are an incoming freshman or selecting classes for your last semester, I am certain that you can relate to how traumatic this can be.

1. When course schedules are released and you have a conflict between two required classes.

Bonus points if it is more than two.

Keep Reading...Show less
Student Life

12 Things I Learned my Freshmen Year of College

When your capability of "adulting" is put to the test

4118
friends

Whether you're commuting or dorming, your first year of college is a huge adjustment. The transition from living with parents to being on my own was an experience I couldn't have even imagined- both a good and a bad thing. Here's a personal archive of a few of the things I learned after going away for the first time.

Keep Reading...Show less
Featured

Economic Benefits of Higher Wages

Nobody deserves to be living in poverty.

302892
Illistrated image of people crowded with banners to support a cause
StableDiffusion

Raising the minimum wage to a livable wage would not only benefit workers and their families, it would also have positive impacts on the economy and society. Studies have shown that by increasing the minimum wage, poverty and inequality can be reduced by enabling workers to meet their basic needs and reducing income disparities.

I come from a low-income family. A family, like many others in the United States, which has lived paycheck to paycheck. My family and other families in my community have been trying to make ends meet by living on the minimum wage. We are proof that it doesn't work.

Keep Reading...Show less
blank paper
Allena Tapia

As an English Major in college, I have a lot of writing and especially creative writing pieces that I work on throughout the semester and sometimes, I'll find it hard to get the motivation to type a few pages and the thought process that goes behind it. These are eleven thoughts that I have as a writer while writing my stories.

Keep Reading...Show less
April Ludgate

Every college student knows and understands the struggle of forcing themselves to continue to care about school. Between the piles of homework, the hours of studying and the painfully long lectures, the desire to dropout is something that is constantly weighing on each and every one of us, but the glimmer of hope at the end of the tunnel helps to keep us motivated. While we are somehow managing to stay enrolled and (semi) alert, that does not mean that our inner-demons aren't telling us otherwise, and who is better to explain inner-demons than the beloved April Ludgate herself? Because of her dark-spirit and lack of filter, April has successfully been able to describe the emotional roller-coaster that is college on at least 13 different occasions and here they are.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments