A Long Way Gone

by Ishmael Beah
A Long Way Gone  
published 2007 by Fourth Estate
binding Hardcover
isbn 0007247087   (isbn13: 9780007247080)
pages 240
literary awards Alex Award
date added
04-05-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 7731)



Kevin
08/05/07

Read in June, 2007
Perhaps Starbucks should stick to what it knows: coffee. Having gone into a local Starbucks for a regular cup of their coffee, I was intrigued by a book recommendation on the counter where I was placing my order. Having seen CDs and pound cake there before, I was surprised to see a pile of books on the same counter. The book had a flashy cover and a title that simply couldn't jog the imagination. A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier read the title along with a staff recommendation to custom...more
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Donna
01/13/08

bookshelves: expanding-horizons, memoir, sierra-leone
Read in January, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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James
03/01/08

Read in November, 2007
I finally got around to reading the highly lauded A Long Way Gone.

“Africa breaks your heart.” That’s what David Denby of The New Yorker concluded at the very beginning of his review for “Blood Diamond,” drawing on the then recent releases of “Hotel Rwanda,” “The Constant Gardener,” “And The Last King of Scotland.”

I concur, having read Ishmael Beah’s memoir relatively close on the heels of Dave Eggers’ What is the What and Beasts of No Nation. I suppose I could compl...more
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steven
02/02/08

Read in February, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Abigail
bookshelves: africa, biography-memoir, human-rights
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: Students of African History, Human Beings interested in Human Rights
By turns disheartening and uplifting, this memoir of a young man who was caught up in Sierra Leone's civil war was recommended to me by my college roommate and dear friend Menna. Beah attended Oberlin with us, and although I didn't know him personally, he and Menna were friends through their involvement in the African Students Union.

This heartbreaking work follows Beah from the idyllic days of his childhood, through the horrors of war, to his eventual escape to the United States. Separated f...more
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Chris
02/09/08

bookshelves: current-events, history, top-shelf
Read in June, 2007
I will never. Never. Complain about my childhood again.

Okay, that's not true. I will. But when I let out a sad sigh of remorse that I didn't figure out exactly why I really wanted to be friends with that one guy in band in high school until it was way too late to do anything about it, I will at least think, "At least I wasn't killing people and snorting gunpowder."

Like most of you reading this, I knew absolutely nothing about what was happening in Sierra Leone in the 1990s. I d...more
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Danna
03/21/08

Read in March, 2008
It's taken me a while to define my reactions to this book clearly enough to write them down. I read another member's comments, and in analyzing my response to his review, I'm finally able to articulate my own.

Goodreads member 'Kevin' had these things to say:

"... what I found even more remarkable is that Beah writes about the nightmares he has about the acts he committed but makes no real reference to why he feels any different today than he did when he committed the atrocities.&quo...more
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Lucy
03/03/08

Read in March, 2008
Heartbreaking. I can't believe people have life experiences like Ishmael Beah. Ishmael, a 27 year-old refugee from Sierra Leone now living in New York City, left his home with his brother and some friends to practice a new rap routine in a neighboring village. He was twelve years old. He never saw his home or his parents again. Rebel forces attacked his village, killing most, and causing the rest to flee.

Without a home to return to, he and his peers managed to spend several months wandering ...more
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Alex
10/24/07

Like Jesus on t-shirts, Che prints on panties, dead rappers, and Darfur doo-rags...tragedy, martyrdom, and atrocities have all become fashionable. It isn't rare that I find someone trading stories (with great excitement) about a friend of a friend who was in Indonesia during the tsunami, or meet an artist eager to proclaim that he lost everything in New Orleans. Surely, a life of meaning must have been filled with unbelievable obstacles. If you spit lyrics, you must have bit the bullet (liter...more
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Bethany
bookshelves: memoir, multi-culturallit, nonfiction
Read in September, 2007
The long and the short of things is that this book is phenomonal. Incredible. Horrifying. Beautiful. It's written in a very straightforward manner; its rather simple and in most places lacks any type of real depth. However, the story that those words are telling is one that I will never forget.

The story is set in Sierra Leone in the early 1990's. The author, Ishmael, is just a young boy of twelve when his village is attacked by rebel troops. Ishmael finds himself orphaned and on the r...more
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Kristine
Read in July, 2007
Good book- short, simple, he describes his experience as a child soldier. Pretty amazing, bc you figure not that many of those child soldiers have the opportunity or inkling to write about it. I do wish the book had a clearer timeline and sense of the history and politics surrounding his personal experience in the conflict, but hey- the guy is not a historian, so I am not gonna bitch about that.

The topic of the Sierra Leone conflict though is FASCINATING, not to mention disgusting when you...more
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Chelsea
It was one of the more incredible books I've ever read. The book is the true story of the author's life in Sierra-Leone, and the story of many other children swept up in the war there. When the author is 12-years-old his village is destroyed and his family lost. He wanders for years, sometimes with groups of other boys, sometimes alone, trying to avoid the rebels and to find a safe place to exist. Eventually swept into the war, hopped up on drugs and handed guns, the boys find themselves so...more
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Bill
02/01/08

Read in November, 2007
It's amazing that this young man is alive and able to write about his life in war torn Sierra Leone. Like any war zone, Sierra Leone is the embodiment of chaos. War makes makes living second to second a random equation. The main character sees men, women, and children die horrible deaths before he's even 14 years old-way more than any hardcore adult soldier. He paints a very clear picture of a country destabilizing and it's frightening.

A first part of the book is pretty much about he and his...more
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Charles
Read in January, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Amy
04/05/08

bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in April, 2008
I have a hard time rating memoirs because I feel like I can't possible "love" something that is clearly such a painful experience from someone else's past. So me giving this three stars doesn't mean I didn't like it, I truly did. It is a shocking and sad story and I feel like I have learned a lot from reading it.

I would have liked to see a bit more explanation towards what the conflict in Sierra Leone was about. I also would have liked to more about the author's life after the wa...more
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Michele
Read in February, 2008
“Children have the resilience to outlive their sufferings if given a chance.”
Ishmael Beah, author of this remarkable and very disturbing memoir, is living proof of this statement. It was a statement initially prepared for him as a spokesperson on the issue of child soldiers during his rehabilitation period, and one he learned to repeat again and again, as he outlived not only this wartime sufferings, but also all of his family members and most of his friends.

“Why does everyone...more
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Mary
10/17/07

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: YES
This book was very very very good - I highly recommend. I really couldn't put it down from the moment I started. I learned a great deal about Sierra Leone, and the unimaginably hard lives of its citizens during the civil war in the 90s.

What blew me away most, I think, is that Beah gives you a portrait of his childhood in such a way that, as much as it's possible to, he makes you truly imagine what it must be like to live a life where constant flight is necessary and violence is brutal, soul...more
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Lois
07/07/07

Read in July, 2007
Ishmael Beah was a vicitm of the civil war/chaos in Sierra Leone who now speaks and writes with an eloquence of spirit that is breathtaking. I guess there has been lots of publicity about this book, but I've got to add mine! No wasted words, no analyzing his own experience, just telling his story of living with war, first as a child who lost his family and joined other boys traveling through the forest from village to village trying to stay a step ahead of the fighting, trying to live in a plac...more
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