![]() Unfortunately, it turns out that Margo didn't really want to be found. ![]() He finally decides that he must take off to find Margo, taking a literal interpretation of the poem's instructions to "unscrew the locks from the doors!" And so Quentin embarks on a journey to discover what happened to the girl he secretly loved. ![]() It frustrates him intensely because while he can understand each word of the poem, he can't understand the piece in its entirety, nonetheless what it might imply about Margo's whereabouts. Quentin spends days poring over the poem, trying to somehow connect it to Margo. The only problem? Any message that Margo was trying to communicate via the poem is very ambiguous. She highlighted sections of the work's most famous poem, "Song of Myself," and Quentin is convinced that this holds significance in explaining her disappearance. ![]() This Walt Whitman book has a major Paper Towns role, as Quentin thinks that Margot intentionally left it as a clue on how to find her. One item which puzzles protagonist Quentin is his discovery of the book Leaves of Grass, which his missing friend Margo left behind with certain lines highlighted. Some of these are obvious, while some are more nebulous, both to viewers and the characters. ![]() Paper Towns, the new film based on John Green's book of the same name, is filled with metaphors. ![]()
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