海角大神

Radiance of Tomorrow

Former child soldier Ishmael Beah offers a quiet tribute to human resilience. 

Radiance of Tomorrow, by Ishmael Beah, Scribner, 416 pp.

Ishmael Beah was 12 when his family was killed during Sierra Leone鈥檚 civil war. He later became a child soldier, writing about the brutal acts he was forced to commit as a young teen in his searing 2007 memoir 鈥淎 Long Way Gone.鈥

鈥淎 Long Way Gone鈥 became an international bestseller, with more than 1.5 million copies sold, according to its publisher. The memoir has been taught widely in colleges and universities. Beah, who was rescued with the help of UNICEF in 1997 and brought to the United States, has since become a UNICEF ambassador and advocate for children affected by war.

The 33-year-old writer returns to the aftermath of that war in his humbling first novel, Radiance of Tomorrow, which uses the gentle, haunting language of fable to describe a heartrending present.

Beah鈥檚 memoir came under scrutiny after Australian journalists at a Rupert Murdoch-owned paper raised questions about the veracity of certain incidents and the timeline during which they occurred.

That won鈥檛 be a factor for the novel, which uses fiction to examine the possibility of creating a future in the wake of such an all-engulfing past.
When 鈥淩adiance of Tomorrow鈥 opens, Mama Kadie and two other elders have returned to the village of Imperi.

The village has been abandoned since Operation No Living Thing, when the soldiers came, torturing and killing everyone they could find. The few survivors have lived in a kind of limbo, hiding for years from the violence of the warring factions.

鈥淓very life seemed on hold,鈥 Beah writes. 鈥淣othing was sure in either direction; everything was temporary, and yet it went on for years.鈥

The elders cleanse the village, giving their loved ones a proper burial. Then, slowly, survivors start to return. The novel centers around Bockarie and Benjamin, the village鈥檚 two teachers, who are trying to build new lives for themselves and their families.

Former child soldiers also are among those who come to Imperi, including the Colonel, a quietly efficient teenager who takes care of the other children, and Ernest, who has become the shadow of a family whose hands he was ordered to chop off with a machete.

While his presence is disquieting, to say the least, Ernest is determined to make amends, although in his own mind he acknowledges the impossibility of ever balancing the scales.

Meanwhile, the village elders 鈥 along with the other survivors 鈥 struggle to determine which of the values of the past still hold true and might offer succor. 鈥淭he war has changed us, but I hope not so much that we鈥檒l never find our way back. I could have never imagined a world where the presence of a child brings something other than joy,鈥 Mama Kadie says.

But the civil war turns out not to be the only tragedy facing Imperi, which finds itself regarded simultaneously as an impediment to and a source of expendable labor for a Western diamond mining operation. The old ways offer slender protection against corruption, bribery, and rapaciousness, and Imperi finds itself being wiped out a second time 鈥 this time by a different kind of warfare.

But Beah鈥檚 characters have a resilience and an ability to quietly nurture hope that is humbling to read about. These characters have suffered things beyond the imaginings of most of the novel鈥檚 Western readers, yet they refuse to despair.

鈥淩adiance of Tomorrow鈥 eschews melodrama and histrionics, matter-of-factly describing the most awful of events in a way in keeping with the air of reserve that Beah鈥檚 characters display. While there is little in the way of a happy ending, life endures.

鈥淲e must live in radiance of tomorrow, as our ancestors have suggested in their tales,鈥 Mama Kadie says in the passage that gives the novel its title. 鈥淔or what is yet to come tomorrow has possibilities, and we must think of it, the simplest glimpse of that possibility of goodness. That will be our strength. That has always been our strength.鈥

Yvonne Zipp is the Monitor fiction critic.

Check out a preview of the audiobook.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines 鈥 with humanity. Listening to sources 鈥 with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That鈥檚 Monitor reporting 鈥 news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Radiance of Tomorrow
Read this article in
/Books/Book-Reviews/2014/0127/Radiance-of-Tomorrow
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe