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Book Review

Publisher's Note:

Forced to become a child soldier, a sixteen-year-old Somali refugee must confront his painful past in this haunting, thrilling tale of loss and redemption for fans of A Long Way Gone and What is the What 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…

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Let’s Go Swimming on Doomsday

by Natalie C. Anderson

Overall Book Review:

Let’s Go Swimming on Doomsday is a raw look at terrorism and its many victims.  This is an emotionally challenging read because of the young age of the protagonist and the heart-breaking actions that enter his life–both as a result of an extremist group and the U.S. forces that are supposedly counteracting that group.  The protagonist, Abdi, is put in a no-win situation, but he struggles valiantly to protect his family.

The format of the book is to switch between current events and past events.  This approach can be confusing at times, but that is actually an effective literary technique in this case because the situation is anything but straightforward and simulates the chaotic nightmare that Abdi is living and his fractured emotional state.

Once the storylines are merged to the present, there is a high-adrenaline climax that is expertly executed and worthy of an action movie.  If the reader can survive the emotional wringing of the early pages of the book, they will be rewarded with a hero with heart in a world that makes no sense.  Recommended read for those young adults wanting to explore tough topics.

Review of an Advance Reading Copy

This book was sent to Compass Book Ratings for review by G. P. Putnam’s Sons

Content Analysis:

Profanity/Language:  3 religious exclamations; 23 mild obscenities; 1 religious profanity; 5 derogatory names; 43 scatological words; 12 anatomical terms; 8 F-word derivatives.

Violence/Gore:  Verbal threats; family member shot, badly, mention of blood; teenage boy is abducted, beaten badly and tortured (electrical wires cut feet), some description; 2 page descriptive scene of shooting; talk of infiltrating militant camp; military discussions/plans; teenage boy is shown a picture of his mother and her face has been beaten; report of smashed cinema and owner drug off; gunshots heard; report of beating; legs switched as character walks; description of treating wounds from beating; threat to grab crotch; flashback, brief image of girl bloodied and broken; brother hits brother hard across the face; report of death by viper; recount of how soldiers took sister, killed brother, and took out 14 year old’s eye; many reference to past violence, conflicts, shooting of people (non-descriptive), reference to a CSI Miami episode where coroner is describing a body’s damage; extended fight scene with snipers, deaths, mention of blood; extended whipping scene, descriptive and upsetting; brother shot, mention of blood, descriptive and extended scene; teenage boy captured/punched and forced to enlist; explosion resulting in severe property damage and injury; struggle/fight with gun, fist, knife–injuries and possible death; multi-page extended scene in which terrorists bomb a public place killing many, taking hostages, and other acts of violence.

Sex/Nudity:  Graffiti sexual references; implication (known but not explicitly stated) that pregnancy in young girls is from rape/soldiers; teen girl accuses teenage boy of wanting to jump someone’s bones; passing reference to porn; character talks in general terms of how she was forced to be a wife to a terrorist; daughter tries to save a father and shouts to terrorists “Rape me until I am a corpse”; girl is stripped naked for a beating, brief description; girl thinks general thought of how boys forced themselves upon her.

Mature Subject Matter:

Terrorism, death, rape, war, forced enlistment of boys, kidnapping, torture, death of family members, extremism, U.S. counter-terrorism efforts (ethics of methods).

Alcohol / Drug Use:

Characters smoke.

Overall Book Rating
Profanity/Language
Rating:
10
10
Violence/Gore
Rating:
6
10
Sex/Nudity
Rating:
3
10

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About the Reviewer

An accountant and CPA by profession, I found myself a book reviewer for Squeaky Clean Reads by happenstance. When the opportunity came to transform that website into Compass Book Ratings, I was excited to seize it and meld my business background with my love of books. As the mother of three teenage sons, I have read a large number of children and young adult books and I believe that there is great value in a content review service. As much as we would love to read everything our children read, there just isn’t enough time. I also appreciate being able to select books for myself that are really worth my precious and limited reading time. I believe there is a book out there for everyone–they just have to find it!