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THE ROAD TO THE COUNTRY by Chigozie Obioma Kirkus Star

THE ROAD TO THE COUNTRY

by Chigozie Obioma

Pub Date: June 4th, 2024
ISBN: 9780593596975
Publisher: Hogarth

A man is forced into the turmoil of Nigeria’s brutal Biafran war.

Adekunle Aromire—the protagonist of Booker Prize finalist Obioma’s third novel—has overheard his mother saying that he’s cursed. By her lights, his neglect caused a car accident that nearly killed his younger brother, Tunde, when the boys were 9 and 6. Years later, in 1967, Kunle is a recent college graduate who learns that his brother has moved with a woman to the new separatist state of Biafra; guilt-stricken and fearing for his brother’s safely, Kunle volunteers with a Red Cross group, one of the few ways for a Nigerian to safely enter the region. Unfortunately, Kunle is separated from the group, found by Biafran soldiers, and compelled to join its army. Biafra’s two-year war with Nigeria was a failed and notoriously brutal affair, killing hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians, and Obioma’s rendition of it is distinguished in part by his unflinching writing about the violence and how Kunle “has drunk his fill of the war’s raw water.” In short order, he and his fellow soldiers grow hardened and demoralized, skeptically considering the generals and mercenaries who deliver their marching orders. (One is Rolf Steiner, a real-life German soldier of fortune.) The horrors are tempered by an unlikely but well-sold battlefield romance and by Kunle’s commitment to fulfilling his original mission of finding Tunde. The story is also leavened by Obioma’s consideration of the role of fate in all this: Interstitial chapters feature a Seer who has prophesied the novel’s events. Obioma has captured the essential elements of the war novel—the near-death experience, the tragic losses, the flickering moments of generosity and grace—but he inhabits them with a rare command, empathy, and intensity of feeling.

A top-tier war novel, inventive and cleareyed about the consequences of violence.