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Anywar, Ricky Richard. Childhood and youth. Juvenile fiction.
Anywar, Ricky Richard. Childhood and youth. Fiction.
Soldiers. Fiction.
Uganda. History. 1979-. Juvenile fiction.
Uganda. History. 1979-. Fiction.
Starred Review The year is 1989 and 14-year-old Ricky s whole family, except his brother Patrick, having been brutally murdered s been kidnapped from his northern Uganda village by the LRA, the Lord's Resistance Army, and pressed into service as a soldier with this unspeakably cruel rebel force. Flash-forward to the year 2006, when another Ugandan boy, 11-year-old Samuel, is wounded in battle, abandoned by his LRA comrades, and, found by a government soldier, brought to a Friends of Orphans camp. Not understanding that he has been rescued by this relief organization, Samuel is determined to escape those he regards as his captors. The novel then moves backward and forward in time as the two boys' stories unfold from their respective points of view. Samuel's story is imagined, but Ricky's is real; Hutton's novel is a lightly fictionalized story of Ricky Richard Anywar, who, himself a former enslaved soldier, grew up to found the internationally acclaimed relief organization Friends of Orphans. The novel is a visceral indictment of man's inhumanity to man, while also celebrating human beings' ability to empathize and to rescue those who desperately need saving. For a similar reading experience, refer readers to Patricia McCormick's Never Fall Down (2012).
School Library Journal Starred ReviewGr 9 Up- compelling tale that recounts the story of former, real-life Ugandan child soldier Ricky Richard Anywar. Told in alternating chapters that focus on Ricky's past and the present-day story of Samuel, this brutally honest novel will have readers struggling to move through the often gruesome initiation of kidnapped children into the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). Ricky is consumed by fear and desperation as he attempts to escape from the LRA with his older brother. Samuel's narration is permeated with distrust and alarm as he figures out how to deal with a severe injury and his placement in a rehabilitation program. This book is filled with many instances of graphic violence. Hutton's intense accounts of families burned alive and machete attacks on villagers emphasize the emotional anguish. While the subject matter is mature, the story is accessible and addresses topics such as world history, civil war, and shifting political powers. A description of the Friends of Orphans program ends this work with a message of hope. Readers may liken this title to memoirs such as Ishmael Beah's A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier. An author's note explains that Hutton spent a considerable amount of time with Anywar and read through several interviews with other survivors to craft accurate depictions of life as a child soldier. VERDICT A must-purchase for teen collections, with the understanding that this text portrays traumatic childhood violence associated with civil war.Monica Cabarcas, Albemarle High School, Charlottesville, VA
Horn BookA harrowing novel about the Ugandan civil war based on interviews with Ricky Richard Anywar, who, at fourteen, was forced to fight by the Lord's Resistance Army and now assists former child soldiers. Chapters alternate between Anywar's life from 19871992 and a fictional wounded boy soldier, Samuel, in 2006, who finally learns to accept help in rebuilding his life. Includes an afterword by Anywar.
Kirkus ReviewsSpanning the conflict-laden years of Uganda's recent history, this debut novel-meets-biography is based on the true story of a former enslaved child soldier who escaped and found his own salvation in providing sanctuary for children who suffered a similar fate. Ricky Richard Anywar was abducted as a child soldier in 1989 to fight for the Lord's Resistance Army, led by the infamous fugitive war criminal Joseph Kony, as continuing legacies of political corruption and economic instability set Uganda on a dark path to civil war. This powerful novel, which features scenes of sheer horror, does not depend on readers' ability to decipher the overwhelming structural factors that have thrown Ricky's Uganda into violent chaos. Rather, it is most significantly a story that stands up for the unrelenting power of the human spirit to reject evil, the nigh-impossible odds that must be conquered to escape enslavement, and the deep scars that remain for a lifetime. In 2006, Samuel, a composite character representative of the thousands of children helped by Anywar's acclaimed Friends of Orphans charity, gives voice to this intimate process of recovery. Interleaved chapters tell Ricky's story from 1989 to 1992. Through Ricky's story, Samuel can find himself home again, before he was a rebel and a soldier, before he was a victim and an orphan, to the time when he "was a student and classmate. A cousin and friend. A brother and son." Unapologetically searing and catastrophically truthful, a reminder to readers that it demands much to meet harsh realities with impossible courage. (afterword) (Historical fiction. 13-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In this brutal debut novel inspired by real-life events, Hutton addresses the horrors of the Ugandan civil war through two child soldiers. The narrative primarily follows Ricky Richard Anywar, kidnapped at age 14 and forcibly inducted into Joseph Kony-s Lord-s Resistance Army alongside his brother and friends in 1989. Over the next few years, Ricky survives horrifying conditions, brutal training, and numerous combat missions, always looking for a chance to escape. Meanwhile, in 2006, 11-year-old Samuel recuperates from grievous injuries after falling in battle, unable to trust his caregivers or the strange man who insists on learning his story. Both boys are forced to confront the memories of lost friends and the things they did to stay alive. Hutton approaches the setting, conflict, and characters with unremitting honesty, drawing from Anywar-s own life (he contributes an afterword) while using the fictional Samuel as a stand-in for the current generation of unwilling soldiers. This isn-t an easy or pleasant read-Hutton doesn-t shy from discussions of rape, torture, and abuse-but it-s eye-opening and relevant. Ages 13-up.
In this fictional biography, Ricky Richard Anywar is stolen from all he ever knew at the tender age of fourteen in 1989. He is forced to become a child soldier in Joseph Konys sadistic rebel army fighting against the Ugandan government. Anywar is trained to kill on command during his terrifying years in captivity. Forced to endure a brutal detention along with other oppressed child soldiers, he witnesses atrocities most humans cannot imagine. Anywar survives because of his fierce hope and determination to return home, though he is uncertain what will await him if he does get there. Through the Friends of Orphans, a foundation Anywar creates many years after his escape, he finally finds the home he desperately hoped for by creating a place of refuge for other child soldiers. The fictional interactions between every-child-soldier Samuel and Anywar at Friends of Orphans gives readers hope that recovery can happen; that it begins with discovering oneself, finding forgiveness, and re-learning to see the humanity in other people.
Starred Review ALA Booklist
School Library Journal Starred Review
ALA/YALSA Best Book For Young Adults
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Voice of Youth Advocates (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Wilson's High School Catalog
A searing, shocking book--part non-fiction, part novel--based on the true story of a child soldier in Uganda who survived war and enslavement and went on to create a haven for others who suffered a similar fate. Soldier Boy begins with the story of Ricky Richard Anywar, abducted at age fourteen in 1989 to fight with Joseph Kony's rebel army in Uganda's decades-long civil war. Ricky is trained, armed, and forced to fight government soldiers alongside his brutal kidnappers, but never stops dreaming of escape. The story continues twenty years later, with a fictionalized character named Samuel, representative of the thousands of child soldiers Ricky eventually helped rehabilitate as founder of the internationally acclaimed charity Friends of Orphans. Working closely with Ricky himself, debut author Keely Hutton has written an eye-opening book about a boy's unbreakable spirit and indomitable courage. Beginning in Africa amidst the horrors of civil war, his is a story that is as uplifting as it is heartwrenching. Praise for Solider Boy : " Unapologetically searing and catastrophically truthful , a reminder to readers that it demands much to meet harsh realities with impossible courage." -- Kirkus Reviews "In this brutal debut novel inspired by real-life events , Hutton addresses the horrors of the Ugandan civil war through two child soldiers. Hutton approaches the setting, conflict, and characters with unremitting honesty , drawing from Anywar's own life (he contributes an afterword) while using the fictional Samuel as a stand-in for the current generation of unwilling soldiers. This isn't an easy or pleasant read--Hutton doesn't shy from discussions of rape, torture, and abuse--but it's eye-opening and relevant." -- Publishers Weekly, starred review "A visceral indictment of man's inhumanity to man, while also celebrating human beings' ability to empathize and to rescue those who desperately need saving." -- Booklist , starred review " A compelling tale . . . with a message of hope . . . A must-purchase for teen collections." -- School Library Journal , starred review "Hutton's debut novel seamlessly blends the biographical account of Anywar's experiences with the fictional story of Samuel . . . Anywar will inspire a multitude of readers with his phenomenal ability to make peace with his past and his desire to help others like him . . . A must-have for every library with a teen collection." -- VOYA "A story that stands up for the unrelenting power of the human spirit to reject evil, the nigh-impossible odds that must be conquered to escape enslavement, and the deep scars that remain for a lifetime . . . Unapologetically searing and catastrophically truthful ." -- Kirkus Reviews "Over the years I have read many novels and memoirs about children and warfare in modern Africa, but Soldier Boy stands out as one of the very best. Based on actual historical events, this compelling novel is a story of great violence and pain, but it is also one of tremendous strength, courage, and resilience . I will definitely be assigning it to my students for many years to come." --Alicia Catharine Decker, Associate Professor, Pennsylvania State University, author of In Idi Amin's Shadow: Women, Gender, and Militarism in Uganda