

These books just felt like books and nothing more. From Paper Towns and the wanderlust angst, to The Fault In Our Stars and the love it showed me. John Green has always written books that interested me. I had so many things to say, definitely on the spoiler-y end, but if I have to say anything, it’s that it was real and I loved it. I’ve sat down and recorded a few videos of myself talking about it because no one had finished it yet and I needed to figure out what I’d say in my review. These are the books that become my favorites. In fact, I love it when books make me feel this way. They’re not and I don’t think they will ever be? This isn’t a bad thing. I told myself I’d write a review when I’m comfortable coming back to it with my feelings all together.


I thought about it so much and how it impacted me, it was hard to handle. The day after I finished it, it’s the only thing I thought about. I’ve been thinking about this book a lot. Feel free to skip around these to avoid spoilers. With your help, I hope to offer an authentic look at what studying this field is like in 2015, and I want to provide a sense of guidance and community to those who may feel like they are lost in the chaos that often is college.TW: This book does portray OCD in a very realistic way so if that’s something you’re uncomfortable reading, I would stray away from this book.Īll spoilers in this review contain BOLD brackets around the text like this. If you like what you read, please consider contributing by filling out the anonymous survey here. If I’ve piqued your interest, you can find more about the book here. My vision depends on people willing to lend their voices, stories, advice, and experiences to this book in order to make it a valuable, one-of-a-kind text where readers can hear from their peers, TAs, and even professors. I see this project as the result of collaboration with people like you who have been there before or who are currently studying art history. I don’t want this book to be narrated by just one voice. As you might have guessed by the title, it will guide students through the process of studying art history in high school (and independently), choosing and applying to college, and majoring in art history. I am writing a book called The Study of Art History: From High School through College. Help your fellow art history students out!
