Monday, September 04, 2006

Beasts of No Nation by Uzodinma Iweala


This is a difficult book to recommend in the usual sense, but one that I feel every teenager in America should read today. The narrator, Agu, is a child in an unnamed West African nation when war comes to town. He is separated from his family and taken into the "army", and before he can even comprehend what is happening to him, he is committing atrocities that almost completely erase his memories of his happy life with his family. The joy of this novel is in the narrative voice that Iweala ingeniously crafts to pull the reader into the innocence of Agu's mind. I read this book in one sitting and nearly wept many times. It is a must-read.

2 comments:

Lotus Reads said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
hmb said...

This is on my list - I went to Uganda in June and traveled to northern Uganda, where I visited a rehabilitation center for former child soldiers...I worked with an 11-year-old boy that had just escaped captivity the day before. Very moving - if you haven't seen it yet, you should check out the documentary Invisible Children. It was made by three young guys - I think your students would probably love it!
Hope you're doing well,
Halle