Pudge has some answers and uses this exam to write about his own misery about Alaska. Once final week was over and I finished the novel, my friend and I started discussing it. We came to the conclusion that Looking for Alaska has a very simple and cheerful plot at times, until you start to distinguish the different ideas that appear in it. We talked for hours in his living room about the different themes that emerge from the plot. I realized how interesting the concept was and started looking for responses from other readers to see what their opinions were. The idea of searching for the Great Maybe and the suffering of the labyrinth have always struck me. This novel really surrounds these ideas and death. I think the novel reminds people not to hope and wait for a moment to happen, but to appreciate life and all the little moments that come with it. Alaska's death occurred right in the middle of the novel to remind readers how quickly life can be taken away. From time to time, people get caught up in everything that is going wrong in their life and how it will get better with time. Pudge becomes fixated on the idea of how he will find the Big Maybe and as Miles moves from school to school he searches for him. He is continually disappointed by his current state. In the first half of the novel, he hopes to find it. He doesn't realize that the Great
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