Monday, March 18, 2019

Let's Go Swimming on Doomsday

Description:

When Abdi's family is kidnapped, he's forced to do the unthinkable: become a child soldier with the ruthless jihadi group Al Shabaab. In order to save the lives of those he loves, and earn their freedom, Abdi agrees to be embedded as a spy within the militia's ranks and to send dispatches on their plans to the Americans. The jihadists trust Abdi immediately because his older brother, Dahir, is already one of them, protégé to General Idris, aka the Butcher. If Abdi's duplicity is discovered, he will be killed.
For weeks, Abdi trains with them, witnessing atrocity after atrocity, becoming a monster himself, wondering if he's even pretending anymore. He only escapes after he is forced into a suicide bomber's vest, which still leaves him stumps where two of his fingers used to be and his brother near death. Eventually, he finds himself on the streets of Sangui City, Kenya, stealing what he can find to get by, sleeping nights in empty alleyways, wondering what's become of the family that was stolen from him. But everything changes when Abdi's picked up for a petty theft, which sets into motion a chain reaction that forces him to reckon with a past he's been trying to forget. 
In this riveting, unflinching tale of sacrifice and hope, critically-acclaimed author Natalie C. Anderson delivers another tour-de-force that will leave readers at the edge of their seats.

My Thoughts:

I can see how this will appeal to YA readers who are looking for a thriller based loosely on recent history. It was suspenseful, and once it got started, fairly fast to read. Abdi is a character that readers will root for, despite his situation. He is 16 but has had to shoulder so much guilt and responsibility on his shoulders. 

The cover is eye-catching and the title is intriguing. Although this is a work of fiction, I hope this will be a ladder to some memoirs  like A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah.  A book is only as good as the next book that it leads a reader to. That is the only way we can help young readers become lifelong readers. 

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