

But when Lucca starts to leave him messages to help Brooklyn, Nico and Brooklyn find themselves being drawn to each other and having to face emotions that have been buried. Nico lost his brother Lucca and is trying to escape the pain.

Brooklyn is loosing sleep and being haunted by Gabe in her dreams.

And now her friend Gabe has died of an overdose. I’m personally not even a huge fan of ghosts or the like present in my contemporary fiction, but that didn’t feel out of place at all.Rating: 5/5 Stars (My first 5 Star of the year!)Ībout the Book: Brooklyn's boyfriend Lucca died a year ago. Schroeder’s style makes this a quick read that’s nevertheless honest and thoughtful. The things Brooklyn and Nico were going through felt truthful to me, and that’s what matters most with a story like this, regardless of the clichés or the ghosts.įor lovers of novels in verse, Chasing Brooklyn is a great read. Even the paranormal aspect didn’t throw off the authenticity in the author’s narration. Sometimes-sappy or not, I think Chasing Brooklyn offers a real view of what it’s like to lose someone you love, and how it’s hard to move on from that. It was so simple that at first I wasn’t certain if I would like it, but once I got a feel for Brooklyn and Nico, things flowed better, and I really began to get into the story, to feel it, so to speak. It’s simple, and maybe a trifle flowery, but it’s also honest. Poetry lends a story rhythm and fluidity, and the sections where Brooklyn was reunited with her boyfriend’s ghost, etc., didn’t feel as cloying as they could have otherwise.īeyond that, I think Schroeder’s free verse is good. I think Lisa Schroeder’s poetry helped alleviate some of the near-suffocating fluff, though. Chasing Brooklyn is narrated in alternating chapters between the two protagonists’ perspectives, covering the development of their friendship as they deal with grief and loss.Ī lot of aspects of this book are a bit cheesy and clichéd. In a paranormal twist, both are visited by the ghosts of the two boys, and all signs seem to point that the supernatural world wants Brooklyn and Nico to be friends. Lucca was Brooklyn’s boyfriend and Nico’s brother. Protagonists Brooklyn and Nico are both haunted by the deaths of two classmates-best friends Lucca and Gabe. The fact that Chasing Brooklyn is a novel in verse made all the differences-had I read the same story in prose, it wouldn’t have gone nearly as well, I don’t think. Take two books, both with the same content, and the one in verse will have this quality of other. There’s something about novels in verse that changes the story.
