
Ultimately, The Fault in Our Stars' ending has several layers, and there are a few questions that it answers beautifully. However, while the movie's tone is melancholy, its story could not end any other way, given how it changes the surviving main character. The conclusion may be easy to guess, as any ill-fated romance movie story about two terminally sick characters falling in love tends to result in one of them tragically passing away at the end. Green currently lives in Indianapolis with his wife and two kids, where he continues to write, produce videos, and speak publicly about an array of topics.The Fault in Our Stars may be a tearjerker, but it has hopeful moments as well, as the characters learn from each other and even take a memorable trip to Amsterdam. He followed that first novel with An Abundance of Katherines (2006), Paper Towns (2008), and The Fault in Our Stars (2012), which reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list for children.

During this time he wrote his first novel, Looking for Alaska (2005) to immediate, and increasing, success. He lived in Chicago for several years, writing book reviews, writing for radio, and working in publishing. He never attended divinity school, however, because his experience working in the hospital with children suffering from life-threatening illnesses inspired him to become a writer. After graduating from Kenyon, Green worked in a children’s hospital while he enrolled in divinity school with the intention of becoming an Episcopal Priest. Later, he attended Kenyon College where he graduated in 2000 with a double major in English and Religious Studies.

During his youth, he attended Indian Springs School, a boarding school near Birmingham, Alabama.

Immediately after his birth, Green’s parents moved to Orlando, Florida.

John Green was born in Indianapolis, Indiana.
