Gayle Forman's message on confronting loneliness

filled star filled star filled star filled star star unfilled
the.overflowing.bookshelf Avatar

By

Released earlier in 2018, I Have Lost My Way is the newest fiction book by author Gayle Forman. Most often recognized for her novel If I Stay (which later became a movie starring Chloë Grace Moretz), Forman is well known for her young adult fiction novels that involve young love and self-discovery. Despite this novel having those same themes running through the text, this novel vastly differs from her other stories in that there are three different points of view that meld into one voice searching for answers instead of the usual one person trying to find his/herself.
I Have Lost My Way follows three young adults who all happen to be in the same place at the same time: Freya, an internet famous singer who has just lost her voice; Harun, a closeted gay teen with strict, religious parents; and Nathaniel, a lost soul struggling to deal with his rough childhood. All three happen to land in Central Park (literally, in one case) and although they seek solitude and desire time for self reflection, they are immediately drawn to one another and refuse to abandon each other as they move around New York City. Through helping each other, each character is able to work through their own loss and discover who they are meant to be.
Following along the ever popular “one day can change everything” plot line, the novel shifts not only from each of the character’s points of view, but also their pasts and current situations. While they all seem to come from drastically different backgrounds and upbringings, it later becomes clear that they each have more in common with one another than they initially realize. All three characters come from either broken or dysfunctional families and the shifting points of view reveal that they all deal with loneliness in some way, shape, or form. This dysfunction and loneliness in their lives cause a struggle to connect with either their families or society. Yet, Freya, Harun, and Nathaniel somehow make a connection with one another. Each character reflects on their lives leading up to the present and how certain decisions have forced them to take different paths. While each truly don't know how to move forward in life, they seek comfort and rely on each other to figure it out.
The addictive quality of the book leaves the reader wanting to learn more about the characters while also wondering how each of them reached the point they are at in their lives. Forman wonderfully weaves these vastly different lives into a cohesive tale of newfound friendship in the city that truly lives up to the nickname “The Melting Pot.” I Have Lost My Way begins with the questions “What if…?” and “How do I move on?” However, the dialogue gradually shifts into the realization that everything happens for a reason and the acceptance of that logic. This novel will leave the reader in awe of the power of fate and destiny while serving as a reminder that we are all connected, even if it isn't obvious at first glance.