I'm always cautious when a young writer is proclaimed as the next great thing. That's the kind of press Uzodinma Iweala has been getting with his debut novel, Beasts of No Nation. While I'm still not quite ready to join the adulation force but this book is undoubtedly a worthwhile read.
Beasts of No Nation tells the tale of Agu, a school-age boy in an unnamed country in western Africa that is in the throes of a civil war. When Agu's mother and sister are evacuated from their village, Agu remains with his father. After his father is killed by a band of fighters who invade the village, Agu escapes but when later found by the fighters is given a Hobson's choice: join the band or be killed. It is the first of an almost continuous series of no-win options for Agu. As he notes near the end of the book, "I am so hungry that I am wanting to die, but if I am dying, then I will be dead."
Two things have perhaps generated the buzz about this book. One is the how well told the story is given the fact its author hails from Washington, D.C. and is a graduate of Harvard University. Iweala, however, slips with ease into his character and tells Agu's story compellingly in less than 150 pages. What helps accomplish that and is likely more responsible for the attention the novel has received is its style. The book is written in the first person and Agu's phraseology and vocabulary are that of a youth who has not had the opportunity to complete his education. Although somewhat off putting at first, the voice tends to make Agu's story more believable, enabling the reader to better see the tale as the viewpoint of a young boy.
And this young boy encounters the entirety of the horrid experience of war and a disintegrating society. He and his compatriots are fed drugs to supposedly make them fight better. He is instructed to kill and finds himself doing so with a removal and ferocity that surprises even him. In fact, he comes to find himself enjoying the killing. He is forced to join in the raping, pillaging and plundering that occurs when the band seizes villages. He and his sole friend in the unit — an adolescent boy who never speaks — become the subjects of sexual abuse themselves.








Article comments
1 - DrPat
The descriptions I've read (including yours) make the book seem to have the flavor of a new Bryce Courtenay (Power of One) or Khaled Hosseini (The Kite Runner) novel.
Whether Uzodinma Iweala will retain that power in the next novel remains to be seen. But isn't that always the question with a debut novel?
2 - Temple Stark
PICK OF THE WEEK ::: A section editor pointed your way as a pick of the 11-19/11-25 week. Click HERE to find out why.
Cheers. Temple