"How you matter is defined by the things that matter to you. You matter as much as the things that matter to you do."
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"How you matter is defined by the things that matter to you. You matter as much as the things that matter to you do."
An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
When I first tried to read this book in 2016, it bored me, I must admit. It was four years ago and I didn’t really know much about heartbreak or math. Now, in 2020, this novel was heartfelt, hopeful, and outstanding.
It was a light read that truly had the power to make you feel good. It was incredibly well-written, not that I’m surprised, having read multiple books by John Green previously.
What was truly fascinating was the addition of math to this plot, the explanations at the end of the acknowledgments. The attention to detail that the author has while creating this new world is extraordinary. He knows what he is doing, even though he admits he isn’t very good at math.
The main character, Colin Singleton, whose name is rather hilarious, is a former child prodigy, but pre-genius. He is insecure, which is easily detected by his constant need to be told that he is smart and that he will become a genius. He is completely self-absorbed, until the end of the novel. He doesn’t really know how to act with everyone else in his life, especially any of the eighteen Katherines he had dated.
He is a sweet and romantic teenager, but ultimately his insecurities tend to ruin most of his attachments to other people, something that I personally find relatable. This novel depicts a boy who doesn’t know what friendship truly is, who doesn’t know how to act and what to say. He somehow seems oblivious to the rest of the world and its interests.
Colin’s best friend, Hassan, is great. Honestly, he is comedically perfect in most situations, especially when he finds out Katrina is cheating on him. He always finds a way to make everyone laugh. His rhetoric seems religious, but he isn’t the perfect Muslim he’d like to be. In all honesty, he shows the amount of hypocrisy that is present in each human being, whether they know it or not.
Lindsey is a strong female character and I loved her. The fact that she wasn’t a trophy to be earned was fantastic. She had just as many insecurities as Colin, but they just manifested themselves differently. She was emotional when necessary and calculating when not. Her intelligence never failed and she was honest which is a quality to be admired.
The plot of the story was well thought out and perfectly portrayed. The setting of the novel was well chosen, a small town in rural America, showing a complex side of what most people think is the land of racism and country music.
I found this book enlightening and insightful. It was a great read and I’m glad I picked it out of my bookshelf and gave it a second chance.
Ho più fame di un ragazzino al terzo giorno di campeggio per bambini sovrappeso
Hassan Harbish, Teorema Catherine, John Green
Sister-Friend
I wonder what would become of us if we had met when we were small you would be my sister friend that I would be too afraid to touch long after the moment we were in high school and I realized you were a woman
You would be my sister friend and we would get drunk in the kitchen I would be your plus-one to your important business meeting and you would introduce me to the love of my life; then I would call you when she cheated on me my sister-friend my sister-friend
Is the fruit only delicious because it is forbidden? for surely the inside is rotten as sin and though your lips are delicate and soft; your teeth are sharp and filled with cavities
And as the gangrene enters my throat I would whisper ‘my sister-friend’ ‘my sister-friend’
I wonder if you even saw the headlights Ford F150 going too fast Straight and fast Straight and fast my sister friend my sister friend
“E mesmo se sentindo patético e ridículo, Colin não queria que aquilo acabasse, porque sabia que a ausência dela doeria mais que qualquer fim de namoro.”
— O Teorema Katherine, John Green.
•16th June 2019•
Finished reading this week after having owned the book for years.
John Green continues to make me smile and laugh and then proceed to have an existential crisis.
I loved spending a few hours in Gutshot, Tennesee(is that how it it's spelled?) And I kept put off reading it quickly just so I can spend more time in Gutshot with all the lovely people.
On a side note, I was watching Chernobyl in between reading this. . . Starkly contrasting narratives obviously.
Colin from "An abundance of Katherines"is 100% autistic, and anyone who disagrees can fight me.