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Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts
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Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts
Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts
Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts
Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier - Powerful True Story of War & Survival | Perfect for Book Clubs & History Enthusiasts
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Description
Book by Beah, Ishmael
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
No matter how you slice it, Ishmael Beah is an amazing man.This autobiographical account of his life details how a happy, cheerful young boy became a merciless soldier at the age of thirteen (and was not the oldest by far). How he went form living with his family in a small village in Sierra Leone to being a drug-addicted killer, ready to gun down anyone who got in the way. Not just killing people, but often doing so in especially brutal ways.Most importantly it details his transformation back from the brink of seemingly endless death and violence into a college-educated young man and exceptional writer.This is, without a doubt, one of the most harrowing, heartbreaking and moving stories I have ever read. Beautiful and honestly written. Passionate and personal, but also painting a larger picture of a world most of will, thank goodness, never experience.For me personally the image that remains most stark is one of a neighbor of Ishmael's, a boy about his age, who is fleeing their village. The boy is carrying a sack of goods from his family's home. The only things he has left of his entire world. But it slows him down, then gets caught between a couple stumps. What happens to the boy is up to the reader to guess, but given that he was being shot at at the time, the likely conclusion is all too grim.(rant approaching) Too often we Americans, comfortable in our relatively easy lives, are inclined to forget the rest of the world. If you asked the average person on the street to name five countries in Africa, they MIGHT get Egypt and South Africa, and then would probably wind up including Afghanistan. Our ignorance about the rest of the world in general and Africa in particular is inexcusible.More than just about anything else this book convinces me that we, as a nation, need to do some sort of "Marshall Plan" for Africa. We can't go in with guns and bombs and make them like us. But we can go in with money, and schools, and medicine. Africa has all the resources it needs to be doing well. But they nevertheless continue to basically suck. Something must be done.I highly recommend this book to readers 10 years or older. I especially recommend it to people who are in their early teens. Perhaps they can learn the horrible lessons Ishmael learned at their age without going through the traumas he experienced.The one real criticism I have of the book is that, like "The Sopranos", it didn't END, so much as just STOP. One moment things are happening, you turn the page, and that's it. It's a minor complaint, but it's still there.This is a book about horrible, horrible war, violence and despair. But it's also a book about hope. I started this review with a quote from Shakespeare, but I shall end with a quote from Cicero who once observed that, "While there's life, there's hope."

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