Literary
Circle – “THE BOOK EARTHWORM”
First Book –
Papertowns by John Green
As
the “Connector” of the group. I connected the novel Papertowns by John Green to
the song Paper Roses by Marie Osmond.
Paper Roses
by Marie Osmond
I realized the way your eyes
deceived me
with tender looks that I mistook for love
So take away the flowers that you gave me
And send the kind that you remind me of
Paper Roses
Paper Roses
Oh how real those roses seem to be
But they're only imitation,
Like you imitation love for me
I thought that you would be a perfect lover
You seemed so full of sweetness at the start
But like a big red rose that's made of paper
There isn't any sweetness in your heart
Paper Roses
Paper Roses
Oh how real those roses seem to be
But they're only imitation like you imitation love for me
with tender looks that I mistook for love
So take away the flowers that you gave me
And send the kind that you remind me of
Paper Roses
Paper Roses
Oh how real those roses seem to be
But they're only imitation,
Like you imitation love for me
I thought that you would be a perfect lover
You seemed so full of sweetness at the start
But like a big red rose that's made of paper
There isn't any sweetness in your heart
Paper Roses
Paper Roses
Oh how real those roses seem to be
But they're only imitation like you imitation love for me
As the connector, I will use the song
entitled “Paper Roses” by Marie Osmond to connect to the novel Paper Towns by
John Green, it don’t actually connect to the whole story, but specifically to
the two main characters, Margo Roth
Spiegelman and Quintin Jacobsen.
Let us imagine that the Paper Roses and in
the song Paper Roses is Margo the girl who stated on the story that she is a
“Paper Girl”. And when the song will be singing by someone, it would be
Quintin, who is secretly in love with Margo. We all know that Paper Roses are
not real, it’s fake and only an imitation. It’s just an artwork made to be a
decoration. In the story Margo call herself a “Paper Girl” which can be seen in
some ways. One is, she is a Paper Girl because she is not the real Margo in
front of many people. She uses this kind of trick so no one can ever realize
and know who really she is. She may not be her real self when she was around
these people, but the person they would want to see. Like a Paper Roses, it may
not be real, but to those who appreciate the beauty of it, they still call it a
rose even if it’s not because it was all made by paper. Another one is, like a
Paper Roses, even if it was made with thick or thin paper sheet, at the end of
the day, when it was crumpled and tore it will never be a Paper Rose, it will
never be perfect as it was newly made. Like Margo, she considered herself as a
Paper Girl, that actually being so Paper thin, frail and easily tearing by
other people which also she called paper people. When this song is to be sing
by Quintin, it only gives a message that even he knew Margo since they were two,
there’s still a part of Margo he doesn’t know. He thought Margo is Margo when
she’s with her friends and family. Only to know that there were different
Margos. Margo in front of her friend Lacey is different. Margo in front of her
parents is different and Margo in front of him is different. He realized that
Margo is not real, she became a different person depending on who she’s around
or who she’s with.
Group mates Works
Ronald
Surilla (Discussion Director)
As a Discussion Director Ronald gave us five
questions to be discussed and answered.
The term, paper town was used in various ways but we have come up with one definition which is the falseness of a place because of fake people inhabiting it. We refer that place as Orlando, the place where Margo lives. Margo thinks that it’s a Paper Town because she thinks that people around her are fake.
Reaction: At
first we all have our own definition of the word Papertowns because it was
defined in the book many times and differently. But we just all agreed that
Papertowne define as the fakeness of the place because of the fake people
inhabiting it. We come up with this kind of answer because we just focus on the
characters of the novel especially Margo who called herself a Papergirl.
2.Why do you think Margo picked Q as accomplice
on her revenge?
After different point of views, we finally agreed that Margo
picked Q as accomplice on her revenge because she used to think of Q as a
coward , as she calls him in the novel, “Scary cat”. Before she left for Agloe,
she wanted to “create in Quentin at least an echo of the kick-ass hero of her
little kid story” she had been creating since she was ten. Therefore picking Q
as a accomplice make sense because she planned it already in her Paper story
and hoping someday it might come true.
Reaction: We
have agreed that Margo picked Q as a accomplice because she used to think that
Q as a coward, but also Margo picked him because he already knew Q since they
were two and they were also chilhood friends and Margo is comfortable with him.
We have decided that we would choose Radar. It’s not that we really wanted to let go of Ben but if there’s a need to choose between the two of them. Radar unlike Ben, would be a better choice because even when Radar has a girlfriend he still involved himself in searching for Margo or whenever Quentin needs help. Q and Radar also have a lot in common. Q may not be as geeky as Radar but he is also wise in finding clues. As for Ben his character as a friend to Q changed when he had Lacey as his girlfriend. It was just a slight changed but enough to make Q rethinks his personality in the story.
Reaction: If
I were going tp choose between the two of my friends. I’ll not choose anyone,
because at first the first place they are your friends and you friended them
not because you eant thier help, but because you understand each other. But in
the case of Q, Radar and Ben. Radar really had a big role in Q’s life and in
finding Margo. I’m not saying that Ben didn’t do something he just prioritized
his girlfriend that’s why he didn’t really focused himself in finding Margo.
4. Do you think Margo wants to be found? Do you
think Margo wants to be found by Q?
Deep inside Margo, her ego tells her that she wants to be found by someone and that is Q. Margo purposely left her first clue outside Q’s window and put a another clue inside his room. This was all planned by Margo as in the story she admits in doing something, planning was the best part. Therefore Q finding Margo in Algoe was part of the design in her plans.
Deep inside Margo, her ego tells her that she wants to be found by someone and that is Q. Margo purposely left her first clue outside Q’s window and put a another clue inside his room. This was all planned by Margo as in the story she admits in doing something, planning was the best part. Therefore Q finding Margo in Algoe was part of the design in her plans.
Reaction: We
come up with that answer, because it really stated in the novel that Margo used
to left clues but she never wanted someone to follow the clues and find her. Actually
at the end when Q found her, she got mad. I think it’s also Q’s willingness to
find Margo.
If we’re in the shoes of Q, we would do our best to find Margo rather than enjoying our last weeks in high school. For Q, Margo is probably the most important person to him (excluding his parents of course) he admires her and he wants to be with her. How we are going to enjoy our last few weeks in high school, when the girl that gives color to our high school life is nowhere to be found.
Reaction: If
I were Q and I’m ilove with Margo. I would also do the same thing and I and my
groupmates agreed that we’ll gonna do the same thing.
Ryan Mark Catanio (Passage Picker)
“What a treacherous thing to believe that a
person is more than a person.”
-
Quentin, Paper Towns –
In the page 278, when Q (Quentin)
saw Margo for the first time after she leave her house, he realized that he
didn’t know Margo yet; that there is something he needs to see; that he was
expecting too much to Margo; that there is a difference between “just Margo”
(present and real) and “Margo Roth Spiegelman” (past and fake). And by that, Q
was pissed to Margo for being vague, but the most importantly; he was pissed to
himself, having the idea of him in-love with Margo Roth Spiegelman without
seeing who the real Margo is. As Margo walks toward Q, Q taught to himself that
it is a treacherous thing to believe that a person is
more than a person. And that is for him was unfair and inhuman to Margo’s side.
In my opinion, the quote “What a treacherous thing to believe that a
person is more than a person”
signifies that it is a betrayal to our humanity when we think that we are more
human. That makes sense for me, as if it free us from hanging to pretend to
live up to the impossible expectation which is our society is throwing at us.
Pretending to walk on water was pain.
This also applies in education,
when some teachers is expecting too much from their students catching up to their
unreachable standards of learning, which will make their students to become a
computer than a being human.
Reaction: Ryan as a passage
picker picked a very good passage. Sometimes, a person needs to hide his or her
real personality. And for Margo’s place. She hides her real personality to
everyone so no one can know who really she is. I think there’s nothing wrong in
hiding your true personality to everybody as long as you do have a reason why
are you doing that kind of thing. In Q’s side, I think theirs is also nothing
wrong with what he have done. Yes he expect too much from Margo, and at the end
of the day he was disappointed. And I think even if he was disappointed his
feelings towards Margo never changed.
Jermaine Dela Cruz (Caharcter Captain)
Quentin “Q”
Jacobsen- The protagonist and narrator of the story. Has had a crush on
his neighbor Margo since they were kids, however that crush develops and before
long Q realizes he's in love with Margo. Throughout the story he follows clues
he thinks Margo, who has gone missing, left behind for him to help him find
her. He soon becomes obsessed with finding these clues and recruits his friends
to help him find Margo.
Q, a typical
high school student who belongs to the group of teens in school who are often
the subject of bullying and mostly left out, can be described as milquetoast,
inquisitive and faithful.
• Milquetoast is somebody regarded as timid or submissive, especially
a man.
Q is a milquetoast because when
Margo asked him to become her accomplice in seeking revenge to those she
thought to have offended her, he agreed to do and whatever Margo told him to
do, he couldn't complain and obeyed her instead.
• Q's inquisitiveness developed when he discovered that every time Margo
disappears, she leaves clues which no one could decipher. He soon tried to find
clues on her latest vanishing and when he had found one, he pursued it which
followed a series of clues which later on led him to Margo.
• Q is faithful to his friends. It very obvious that among the three of
them, Q is the one closest to normal. Despite the weirdness of his friends, Q
remained loyal to their friendship which eventually helped him in his pursuit
of his one great love.
Margo Roth
Spiegelman- Margo is a self described Paper Girl who runs away from home
only to be pursued by her childhood friend, Q. Her pet dog, Myrna Mountweazel,
is a reference to Lillian Virginia Mountweazel,[5] a woman who never existed,
but was listed in the 1975 edition of the New Columbia Encyclopedia.
Margo can be
best describe as mysterious, clever, and ungrateful.
• Margo is undeniably mysterious. Her strangeness is
incomparable. In other words, it isn't easy to understand her.
• For me clever is the best word to describe Margo. She is clever in many
ways. There wouldn't be a story without her shrewdness.
• Margo is ungrateful. After driving from Orlando, Florida to Agloe, New York
in twenty-four hours, Q and his friends
found Margo living in an old dilapidated barn. But instead of being
grateful for them finding her, she reacted negatively. Margo had not intended
for them to find her.
Ben Starling- He is one
of Quentin's best friends. He is in the school band and also helps Quentin find
Margo, and in the process, becomes Lacey's boyfriend. Towards the beginning of
the book, Ben has an obsession with prom and refers to girls as "honeybunnies".
Ben is pervert, funny and like Q, he is loyal to their friendship.
Marcus
“Radar”- One of Q’s best friends. In the novel he is constantly editing
pages on a website called Omnictionary (which is very similar to Wikipedia). He
was nicknamed by Quentin and Ben after the character from M*A*S*H. His parents
own the world's largest collection of black Santas. He is in the school band.
He assists Quentin in finding Margo. Radar is geeky (from the word geek which
means somebody who is a proud or enthusiastic user of computers or other
technology, sometimes to an excessive degree), reliable and loyal to their
friendship.
Reaction:
Jermaine as the character captain really did a good job in characterizing the main characters in the
novel. She also gave and put the charateristics of the main characters, she
also used the words that best decribes the characters.
John Demdam (Artistic Adventure)
A Paper Poem by a Paper boy and a Poetic
girl
I don't mind,
living in a world full of paper clips,
Where paper people with paper houses talk with
their paper lips.
Real may they seem in the eyes of many,
Looking inside
them, they're all half-empty.
I've known a
princess from a paper castle,
A paper maiden with a paper battle.
To paper enemies she sought for vengeance,
She did it all
because of grievance.
In some ways paper
people made some mistakes
That will let themeselves to be fake
But paper people
may also be real people
They may haughty,
arrogant but meek and humble.
It's time to end
this paper poem,
Written on a paper in a paper home.
Paper poems are made by paper people,
And read by the
readers either it's bare or ample.
Reaction: In John’s part he gave a perfect poem that
really suits to the novel Papertowns.
Hara Vessa Escabarte (Vocabulary
Enricher)
Reading John
Green’s “Papertowns”, is fulfilling yet there are also instances meeting some words
that are not familiar to me, so while reading I marked and jotted some of these
words that I find puzzling or unfamiliar, listed below are the words with their
definitions and relevance in the story.
Chapter and Paragraph Number
|
Word
|
Definition
|
Importance or Relevance to the Story
|
|||
Ch. 1, Paragraph 5
|
Morosely
|
[muh-rohs]
(adv.) very serious, unhappy and quiet
|
Describes the way Radar inform Q about he
was going on the prom.
|
|||
Ch. 1, Paragraph 43
|
Sluggishness
|
[sluhg-ish]
(n.) moving slowly or lazily
|
The way that Q describes the clocks, when
he gets bored.
|
|||
Ch. 2, Paragraph 1
|
Swiveled
|
[swiv-uhl]
(v.) to turn around
|
Q’s movement, when he heard the window open
and saw Margo.
|
|||
Ch. 3,
Paragraph 10
|
Felonies
|
[fel-uh-nee]
(n.) a serious crime
|
Q’s interpretation on Margo when she enters
through the window of Q’s room.
|
|||
Ch. 3, Paragraph 25
|
Honk
|
[hongk,
hawngk]
(n.) to make a loud sound
|
Q’s interpretation in Margo blowing the
horn excruciatingly.
|
|||
Chapters; 2, 3, 26
|
Aneurysm
|
[an-yuh-riz-uhm]
(n.) an abnormal blood-filled bulge of a
blood vessel and especially an artery resulting from weakening (as from
disease) of the vessel wall.
|
A term used by John Green in the book
referring to someone’s common characteristic.
|
|||
Chapter; 2 and 4
|
Somersault
|
[suhm-er-sawlt]
(n.) a forward or backward movement of your
body on the ground or in the air that is made by bringing your feet over your
head.
|
Used in the passage as a movement or a
motion acted by Q.
|
|||
Chapters; 4, 18 and 21
|
Labyrinth
|
[lab-uh-rinth]
(n.) something that is extremely
complicated or difficult to understand; a place that has many confusing paths
or passages
|
Used to describe an appearance of the ff:
Place (C. 4)
Book’s arrangement (C. 18)
Shelves (C. 21 “Labyrinthine”)
|
|||
Chapters; 4 and 41
|
Jugular
|
[juhg-yuh-ler, joo-gyuh-]
(adj.) relating to the throat
|
Referring to Q’s specific part of the body.
|
|||
Chapters; 5. 19
|
Skunk
|
[skuhngk]
(n.) an obnoxious or disliked person
|
Used to describe obnoxious something.
|
|||
Chapter 5, Paragraph 19
|
Monstrosity
|
[mon-stros-i-tee]
(n.) something (such as a building) that is
very large and ugly
|
Q’s word for the house structure of Jase.
|
|||
Chapter 5, Paragraph 30
|
Deign
|
[deyn]
(v.) to do something that you think you
should not have to do because you are too important.
|
Q’s in silent interaction with Margo about
what lacey would do to him.
|
|||
Chapter 5, Paragraph 44
|
Jimmy
|
(v.) to force (something such as a lock,
door or window) open with a metal bar or a similartool
|
The term used by Q describing what Margo
did on the front door of Lacey’s car.
|
|||
Chapters; 6 and 19
|
Cul-de-sacs
|
(n.) a street that is designed to another
street only at one end
|
Used to describes a pathway appearance
|
|
||
Chapter 6, Paragraph 34
|
Bum
|
(n.) a drinking spree
|
Margo’s term for the paper kids drinking stuff.
|
|||
Chapters 7
|
Wrath
|
(n.) strong vengeful anger or indignation
|
A feeling of angriness used by Margo and Q
|
|||
Chapter 7, Paragraph 8
|
Czarist
|
(n.) Government of Russia, autocratic rule
|
Q used to describe Russian government.
|
|||
Chapter 7, Paragraph 8
|
Yodeling
|
(v.) to sing loudly whole changing your
voice back and forth between a natural pitch and higher pitch
|
|
|||
Chapters; 1, and 7
|
Faggot
|
(n.) a male homosexual
|
Margo’s terminology name for Q regarding
his vocabulary.
|
|||
Chapter 7, Paragraph 22
|
Usurped
|
(v.) to take and keep something, such as
power in a forceful or violent way and especially without the right to do so
|
Margo’s argumentative-conversation-term
with Q.
|
|||
Chapter 7, Hour Four
|
Torso
|
(n.) the main part of the human body not
including the head, arms and legs
|
Part of the body.
|
|||
Chapter 7, Paragraph 37
|
Undulation
|
(n.) a wavy appearance
|
Q’s terminology for his describing his
torso.
|
|||
Chapter. 8 Paragraph 6
|
Chauffeur
|
(v.) drive (a car or a passenger in a car),
typically as part of one's job
|
Margo’s statement unto Q when they were in
argument.
|
|||
Chapter. 8, Paragraph 7
|
Miscreant
|
/ˈmiskrēənt/
(adj.) (of a person) behaving badly or
in a way that breaks a law or rule.
|
Q’s point of view in his manner dwelling
with Margo towards the SeaWorld, he might be called for university.
|
|||
Chapter. 8, Paragraph 22
|
Shamu
|
Shamu was the first orca to survive
more than 13 months in captivity and was the star of a very popular killer
whale show at SeaWorld San Diego in the mid–late 1960s. She was the fourth
killer whale (orca) ever captured (the second female).
|
Margo’s citation to Q about the SeaWorld’s
most intrigue issue.
|
|||
Chapter 8, Paragraph 28
|
Ditch
|
/diCH/
(n.) a narrow channel dug in the
ground, typically used for drainage alongside a road or the edge of a field.
|
The drainage that could be found on the
third side of the SeaWater.
|
|||
Chapter 8, Paragraph 40
|
Moccasin
|
/ˈmäkəsən/
(n.) a venomous American pit
viper.
|
Q’s prediction when Margo threw in the moat
and was bitten by some creature she doesn’t know.
“What was it? Was it a moccasin?” said Q.
|
|
||
Chapter 9, Paragraph 7
|
Helluva
|
/’heləvə/
Non standard spelling for *hell
of a*
|
Q’s statement, describing the night he had
with Margo.
“Well, it was a helluva night”, Q stated.
|
|||
Chapter 10, Paragraph 51
|
Cacophony
|
/kəˈkäfənē/
(n.) a harsh, discordant mixture of
sounds.
|
Q was resting, when suddenly a cacophony
sound was coming from inside.
|
|||
Chapter 11, Paragraph 1
|
Anarchic
|
/aˈnärkik/
(adj.) with no controlling rules or
principles to give order
|
Q’s fantasizing thought about their high
school status.
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
|||
Reaction: On Hara’s work. She gave some of
the unfamiliar words that you may read in the novel Papertowns, she also have
her own style in giving the meaning of these words.
Arjun Dango
(Summarizer)
The Book-Earthworm’s Summary of John Green’s Paper Towns
The story started at a young age of Quentin
Jacobson and Margo Roth Spiegelman. While walking in the park, they found the
dead body of Robert Joyner that he and Margo shared a discovery that will
change their lives forever. Since that night, Margo had a separate way while
good fortune led Q to a better life but with twists and turns and a lot of
travel.
One night, few weeks before their graduation, Margo
asked Q to come with her for a night till near dawn adventure and full or
revenge. Leaving pranks on her ex-boyfriend’s house, her ex-best friends, and
the school bully; including breaking into Sea World. Q thinks that this
adventure will lead him back to Margo but he was wrong. Later that morning,
Margo disappeared.
Q together with his friends, Ben and Radar, and
Margo’s friend―Lacey, they searched for clues where Margo can be found just
like what she always does when she leaves. There were clues that lead him to an abandoned mini mall where he
thinks Margo has spent time recently; they found a map with marks that ends on
Agloe. They did some research and discovered that Agloe was actually a
copyright trap created by Esso. When they search for it on “Omnictionary”, they
discover that someone has posted stating the population of Agloe “Will actually
be One until may 29th at Noon.” There raised Q’s red flag that there’s only one
person can write with that kind of capitalization. And because of it, they
skipped their graduation to travel to another country that will take them 21
hours. Technically, the travel took them 24 hours with a near death experience.
Eventually,
they arrived in Agloe. And discover Margo in yet another abandoned building.
Yet she is not the same person they all thought they knew. They find her
furious that they found her and they’re upset that she’s not the Margo they
knew before she left. In the end, they realize that they don’t need to be who
everyone wants them to be. The story ends with a kiss but not to our
satisfaction. Q’s relationship with Margo will never be anything more than
friends
Reaction: The summarizer gave the
plot of the story correctly, somehow, but his work will be more comprehensible when
he used the plot structure in sequencing the story.
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