John Green
- In full:
- John Michael Green
- Born:
- August 24, 1977, Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S. (age 47)
John Green (born August 24, 1977, Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.) is an American author who writes realistic fiction for young adults. Reviewers have praised Green’s work for his bright yet troubled characters and thoughtful treatment of difficult topics.
Green is the son of Mike Green, a business executive, media consultant, and producer of socially engaged films, and Sydney Goodrich Green, the daughter of Henry Goodrich, the onetime chairman and chief executive officer of Inland Container Corporation. He grew up in Orlando, Florida, and Birmingham, Alabama. Green attended the Indian Springs School near Birmingham before matriculating at Kenyon College in Ohio, where he double majored in English and religious studies. After graduating in 2000, he worked as a student chaplain at a children’s hospital and considered becoming an Episcopal priest. However, his experiences with the patients at the hospital and the sadness and loss they confronted helped him decide to become a writer. Green began his literary career working as a publishing assistant and production editor at the Chicago-based book review magazine Booklist. While in Chicago Green also wrote for National Public Radio’s All Things Considered as well as for public radio station WBEZ.
Green’s first published book, Looking for Alaska (2005), follows a teenage boy as he spends his junior year at a boarding school where he makes friends, falls in love, and deals with loss and death. Looking for Alaska won the 2006 Michael L. Printz Award for excellence in young adult literature. Green’s next book, An Abundance of Katherines (2006), was named a Printz honour book in 2007. Its main character, Colin, has dated 19 girls named Katherine, and they have all broken up with him. Confused and angry about his dating past, Colin goes on a road trip with his friend Hassan. Along the way, Colin tries to create a mathematical equation that will predict the success of romantic relationships.
Paper Towns (2008) explores the relationship between high-school seniors Quentin and Margo. Quentin has secretly loved Margo for years. After joining Quentin in some pranks, Margo disappears. However, she leaves clues for Quentin to help him find her. Although the two are eventually reunited, they ultimately decide to go their separate ways. Paper Towns won a Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award in 2009 for best young adult book. It was made into a film in 2015.
Green coauthored his next book, Will Grayson, Will Grayson (2010), with David Levithan. The novel relates the story of two extremely different teenagers who are both named Will Grayson. Their lives become intertwined after they meet. Green’s next book, The Fault in Our Stars, was published in 2012 and was turned into a film in 2014. It explores the relationship between two teenagers battling cancer. Turtles All the Way Down (2017) deals with mental illness. The story is told from the perspective of Aza, who suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder and comes to realize that she must learn to accept her illness in order to lead a fulfilling life.
Besides writing, Green has maintained a YouTube video blog with his brother, Hank, called VlogBrothers, which they created in 2007. In 2010 the brothers cofounded VidCon, an annual conference that allows the online video community to interact in person. The two also created an educational channel on YouTube called Crash Course. They and other hosts present lessons in such science and humanities fields as mythology, astronomy, chemistry, history, literature, and government, employing a fast-paced often humorous format that attracted an enthusiastic audience of teenagers. In an interview with Publishers Weekly in 2015, Green said of his approach to the channel: “I see Crash Course as an introduction, as a way to get kids excited about learning, not as an attempt to replace traditional classroom materials.”
He and his brother began hosting a podcast, Dear Hank & John, in 2015. From 2018 to 2020 Green had his own podcast called The Anthropocene Reviewed. He adapted some of the podcast episodes into essays that he published in a book of the same name in 2021. Green’s wife, Sarah Urist Green, formerly curator of contemporary art at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, is the author of You Are the Artist: Assignments to Spark Creation (2020) and the creator of The Art Assignment, an educational video series that seeks to demystify art and art history.