Paper Towns by John Green
reviewed by Gerti
I’ve
read several John Green books now, and while “Paper Towns” is not
my favorite, it is not his worst either. PT has a typical Green
formula - a charming pre-college narrator (Quentin Jacobsen in this
case) who travels the country, amidst tortured tales of teen angst
and romance. High school senior Q (short for Quentin) is in love with
his neighbor, Margo Roth Spiegelman, who is far more attractive, more
interesting, and more everything than Quentin. She is a popular girl
with a reputation for fearlessness, and as such, hell breaks loose
when she finds out her boyfriend has been cheating on her. Q helps
with her multifaceted revenge plan, but when Margo’s breakup
precedes her leaving town, “Paper Towns” turns into “Looking
for Alaska,” another (better) Green novel in which the female love
interest disappears, forcing the protagonist into a road trip of self
discovery. In this case, it is also literally a trip from Florida to
a “paper town” in New York.
Quentin
faces the same issues faced by Alaska’s hero – has the girl he
was crushing on killed herself? To find resolution, Q and his friends
(fellow seniors Radar and Ben, as well as Ben’s girlfriend Lacey)
follow clue after clue in order to track down a mercifully
still-living Margo. But there are few happy endings in life, and
there is none here in “Paper Towns”, for while the band of
friends find Margo in Agloe, New York (a town which doesn’t really
exist at all), Margo didn’t want to be found. The “paper town”
destination is a metaphor for Q’s relationship with Margo herself.
He is in love with his idea of her, and not with the person she
really is. In the same way, a paper town exists only on paper, a
place invented by map publishers to keep others from stealing their
information.
This
book, like all of Green’s novels, is populated by fascinating,
quirky, sometimes brilliant characters. The situations presented are
also relatively unique, but I like this book less than some of
Green’s previous efforts, perhaps because Margo is so very
unlikeable. Her revenge plan for her cheating boyfriend is over the
top, her idea of fun (sneaking into Sea World when it’s closed) is
over the top, and her final departure from her previous life, family
and friends, is so abrupt and final that she seems seriously damaged,
rather than charmingly adventurous. She has deep-seated psychological
problems and needs professional help, not just a group of supportive
friends. Her pattern of living alone in deserted buildings (one a
mini-mall filled with asbestos) is dangerous and for a young,
attractive woman, a recipe for disaster.
Green’s
books are usually charming, fun and easy-to-read, but this novel
leaves me with a sour taste. When Q leaves Margo behind, I root for
him to get over her, because I don’t see her story ending in
anything besides suicide. I understand Green’s message – that we
can never really know other people - but that ground was covered more
effectively over a hundred years ago by Nathaniel Hawthorne in “The
Minister’s Black Veil.” Avoid making a trip to this “Paper
Town.”