Chasing Brooklyn by Lisa Schroeder

Chasing Brooklyn

by Lisa Schroeder

When Lucca died, no one took it harder than his best friend, Gabe. It's exactly one year later, and Gabe has just died of a drug overdose. Tragedy striking yet again.
Brooklyn, Lucca's girlfriend, has learned to wear a mask of strength and indifference after losing the boy she loved. But inside, her emotions are in turmoil. Now her dreams are being haunted by a ghost, gray and sinister. She knows it's Gabe chasing after her, but she doesn't know why. She's desperate to find a way to stop the nightmares, but she feels like she has no one to turn to.
Nico, Lucca's brother, has learned to cope by shutting everyone out. So when he learns of Gabe's death, he's not too fazed by it. But soon he begins hearing voices in his sleep, seeing notes on his window, and getting general signs requesting him to do one thing: Save Brooklyn. Convinced it's Lucca, Nico reaches out to help Brooklyn as best he can.
Together they discover a mutual desire to live again, as they also discover a growing desire for each other.

Reviewed by Leah on

3 of 5 stars

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Brooklyn can't sleep. Her boyfriend, Lucca, died a year ago and since then it's as if she's just stopped living, too. Things worsen when her friend Gabe kills himself and seems to be haunting Brooklyn in her dreams - why is he in her dreams instead of Lucca? Lucca's brother Nico can't stop running. The only time he even feels vaguely normal is when he goes running. Nico is struggling, too, as it appears that Lucca's ghost is visiting him, demanding that he help Brooklyn. As Gabe's visits into Brooklyn's dreams become more frequent and Lucca's messages for Nico, too, Nico decides to reach out to Brooklyn. But how can he help her, when he can't even help himself?

I've never really heard of Lisa Schroeder before but when I saw the summary on International Book Tours, I immediately signed up as I loved the synopsis. However once I got an email telling me it was coming to me, I looked it up on Amazon to see what it was about and I learned that instead of being written like an actual book with sentences, this was a novel written in verse. This surprised me as I've never read a book written in verse and, to be honest, I was rather worried because it really didn't appeal to me. However I knew I would have to read it to provide a review so I sat down to get stuck in.

One of my main worries about reading a book written in verse was that it would, quite simply, be boring and plotless. Yes the synopsis tells us a plot of the book but how much detail can you make of a plot when each page contains 15 lines maximum? However I'm pleasantly surprised to report that the book was neither boring nor plotless. The fact that there's only 10-15 lines per page makes for an incredibly quick read. It also makes it incredibly moreish and I found myself wanting to read just one more page - up until the point that I read the whole book in one sitting. The plot is a little thin on the ground particularly since I'm not a huge believer in ghosts and people haunting you in your dreams but it moved along a quite a pace and there wasn't too much focus on the ghostly aspect.

Another worry I had was that I wouldn't fully connect to the characters and although I could manage to tell Brooklyn and Nico apart I can't really say they were fully rounded characters. The lack of description about themselves was unfortunate and I can't say that I imagined either Brooklyn nor Nico in my head as real, proper characters. The one thing that saved Brooklyn and Nico from total oblivion in my mind was the powerful emotions they're both feeling regarding the deaths of both Lucca and Gabe. I thought all of their emotions were hugely real and I did feel for both Brooklyn and Nico over what they were going through. I for one couldn't imagine anything like that happening to me and still being able to exist after it happened.

The book is told in alternating chapters - though they aren't really chapters - by both Nico and Brooklyn and I must say I enjoyed Nico's chapters more than Brooklyn's. Nico seemed more of a survivor whereas Brooklyn seemed eager to just let go. I liked how the relationship developed between Brooklyn and Nico though and it was sweet how they both tried to help each other. I can't really compare Schroeder's writing with anything as this is the first verse novel I've read but I will say that I managed to read it really quickly; the pages just fly by because there's so few words.

Overall I thought Chasing Brooklyn was a fairly decent read. It had emotion and seemed to be written beautifully. I wouldn't say that I'm a convert to verse-written books, I'd say they're more something you get used to rather than love automatically like regular books or perhaps they're more like marmite - you either love books written in verse or you hate them. I can't say I loved Chasing Brooklyn but nor did I hate it, it was really just OK. I certainly don't think I'll be buying or pre-ordering any verse-written books but if I happen to come across a cheap copy I certainly would give them another go!

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 18 April, 2010: Finished reading
  • 18 April, 2010: Reviewed