In case you didn't know, I keep
lists of what I've read on the West Library website. I do this mainly so I can remember what I've read, and then I use the lists to offer suggestions to students and staff looking for a good read. One book I will be adding to my list is the biography
A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, by Ishmael Beah. However, it's not enough for me to just list this book with all of the others I've read this year. I want to strongly encourage everyone who reads this blog to head to your library, bookstore, or
Starbucks, and start reading this book today.
Early on in the book we meet Ishmael, a 12 year-old boy who likes to lip sync and dance to rap music in his village in Sierra Leone. But when rebels invade his village in 1992, and burn it to the ground, Ishmael flees and spends months hiding in forests, trying to find food to survive, and hoping to reunite with his parents and siblings. Just when it looks like there's a bright spot in his miserable life, and his family is within eyesight, rebels attack again with disastrous results.
By age 13, Ishmael is taken in by the government army which houses and feeds him, and also trains him for war. He is issued an AK-47 and the reader watches his chilling transformation from a boy who loves soccer and rap music, to a killing machine. Most painful are the stories he shares about the two boys Sheku and Josiah, only around seven years-old, who can barely lift the machine guns, let alone hold them up to shoot them; the guns were taller than the boys.
Ishmael is eventually removed from the fighting by UNICEF, and rehabilitated and reunited with family. But once again, in a cruel twist of fate, war comes to Ishmael's doorstep. He flees Sierra Leone for good this time, and while his physical journey ends in NYC, his personal journey toward forgiveness and healing goes on indefinitely.
This is an extraordinary story that reflects one man's life, but mimics the lives of millions of other children in war-torn nations. And fortunately, Americans are reading it. It's currently #5 on the
New York Times Best Seller List and is in the running for being one of
Amazon.com's Best Books of 2007. Eve
n the
NY Times gave it a flattering
review.
Without a doubt, this is my pick for the best book I've read so far in 2007. If you've read it too, let me know what you think.