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Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 12/2022
  • 9798218101008
  • 270 pages
  • $16.95
Patrick Asare
Author
The Boy from Boadua: One African's Journey of Hunger and Sacrifice in Pursuit of a Dream

Adult; Memoir; (Market)

The Boy from Boadua is a story of hunger, hardship, hope, and tenacity. It’s about believing anything is possible if you set your heart—and mind—to it. My story begins when I was a young boy growing up in a family so large and impoverished that no amount of backbreaking labor could keep our bellies full. Though no one in Boadua had ever progressed beyond elementary school, I was willing to endure any hardship in pursuit of what any reasonable person would consider a pipe dream: a world-class education. In my remote Ghanaian village, most parents were illiterate and so did not understand the value of education. A love of reading led me to spend my meager breakfast money on newspapers that opened my eyes to a world I was determined to experience. I learned about a famous secondary school my parents could not possibly afford; however, I believed that if I traded precious hours of sleep for studying, I would somehow find my way there. My journey took me from a jungle full of poisonous snakes to an elite boarding school where I learned to use utensils for the first time, to the Soviet Union during the perestroika era, and ultimately to the United States. There, while teaching in an inner-city school district, I experienced a rude awakening: many of my students rejected their precious chance to become educated because they saw no way out of their bleak circumstances. Given the unimaginable sacrifices I had to make as a young boy to advance my education, I was astonished to find such large numbers of minority children who made no attempt to learn when they entered my classroom, even though relative to my village school, this one had much better resources. I subsequently learned from other teachers at the school that the behavior I was witnessing was commonplace in many urban American public schools. Haunted by that revelation, I set out on another quest to explore the reason for these students’ disruptive behavior. As a new immigrant at the time, I had little knowledge of the complex set of racial, socio-economic, cultural, and political factors that, collectively, rob America’s minority communities of their hope, leading many children to give up on education so early. Through extensive readings, listening to debates on some of those thorny issues, and careful observation of American society over the past two decades, I have gained a reasonably good understanding of the environments that shaped my students’s world view. In the process, I began to realize that, ironically, I was perhaps lucky to have grown up in a poor village in Ghana, rather than urban America. The Boy from Boadua takes readers along on that unlikely journey from Ghana to America. It compares the educational systems in Ghana and the U.S., contains firsthand knowledge of life as it was on both sides of the Iron Curtain during the perestroika era, and chronicles my experiences in America over the past two-and-a-half decades. It concludes with some personal reflections, conducted through the prism of the totality of my life experiences, on issues such as education, race, culture, and geopolitics. It also acknowledges the part luck plays in life outcomes and the importance of role models. As an African and an American, I am all too aware of the ways race and socioeconomic status can impact lives. I have observed firsthand how the legacy of slavery still hampers urban blacks, inhibiting ambitions and breaking spirits. But these challenges are not insurmountable. I hope my memoir will inspire others to dream the impossible dream.
Plot/Idea: 10 out of 10
Originality: 9 out of 10
Prose: 9 out of 10
Character/Execution: 9 out of 10
Overall: 9.25 out of 10

Assessment:

Plot/Idea: Asare overcomes a life of poverty, hunger, and illiteracy while growing up in Ghana where education was not important. Determined to learn to read, he eventually applies to a private school that his family cannot afford. His determination to succeed prevails, and he eventually earns a degree in engineering. The lessons that Asare learns will inspire readers to do more even when the odds are against them.

Prose: Finely written, Asare relays a tough situation to the reader yet never falters by feeling sorry for himself. Instead he focuses on what he can control, notably the pursuit of education. His down to earth approach will compel the reader to understand his plight and cheer for his success.

Originality: From a childhood of scarcity in Ghana to studying electrical engineering in the former Soviet Union, Asare's narrative is a fascinating and one.

Character/Execution: Despite the dire circumstances of Asare's upbringing, he brings mature perspective to his past struggles. In addition to detailing the events of his life, Asare offers profound and hard-earned wisdom.

Date Submitted: January 30, 2024

Reviews
Asare’s inspirational memoir details his surprising journey from a small village in Ghana to becoming an electrical engineer in the United States, with many unexpected stops along the way. Asare encounters a slew of cultures and experiences, from attending an elite private school in Accra known for having taught Ghana’s most influential citizens, to studying electrical engineering in the Soviet Union, to teaching at a public school in the United States. Throughout this odyssey, Asare maintains discipline and perseverance and especially an ethos of “nonstop work,” taking great efforts to excel at everything he sets his mind to, from learning English from newspapers to substitute teaching to gain an economic foothold in America. This memoir is a clear-eyed account of the hardships he faced, and lessons he learned.

Right off the bat, Asare throws readers into a compellingly drawn world replete with rampant poverty, hunger and illiteracy. There is nothing stereotypical about the way Asare portrays the various villages and cities through which his life passes. His account is scattered with piquant, often outright funny, incidents which lend the narrative a buoyancy amid all the strife. A large part of the story involves historical details and incidents that Asare lived through, and to which he offers an insider’s perspective. Readers will constantly find themselves amazed at Asare’s unflagging persistence in trying to rise up and live the life he envisions for himself.

At times, Asare has a tendency to be a little pedantic, and contemplating life and America and what one ought and ought not do. At other times, the memoir reads slightly like an elaboration of a resume, an extremely impressive one at that. But overall, Asare is clear that he is writing this account to “share some of the valuable lessons he learned” and his sharp, engaging prose will keep readers hooked. Lovers of international stories of perseverance, history, and politics will enjoy this memoir, which is as illuminating as it is inspiring.

Takeaway: This memoir of leaving Ghana to find success in the U.S. is inspiring, surprising, and well written.

Great for fans of: Krishan K. Bedi’s Engineering a Life, Ousman Umar’s North to Paradise.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 12/2022
  • 9798218101008
  • 270 pages
  • $16.95
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