OLDER FICTION
(1) YA Translated by Rosie Hedger. Beasts have invaded thirteen-year-old Abdi’s homeland. With their hoofed feet, long arms, slender hands, and razor-sharp claws, the beasts pursue and kill every living creature. The government has collapsed; there’s no electricity; supermarkets are empty. What’s even worse is the way people have turned against one another, fighting for survival. When their mother is killed, Abdi flees through open ­country with his little sister, hoping to reach the coast and find a boat to take them overseas to their father. Bjerkeland’s propulsive tale is sleek and elegant, a subtle blend of fable and realism that increasingly reflects many of today’s desperate refugees’ experiences. Every sentence is direct and brief, vivid with eventfulness, uncertainty, and Abdi’s deep sense of responsibility for his sister. Even moments of rest and relative safety—the pleasure of food or the solace of finding one trustworthy adult—are highly charged. “I missed grown-ups,” Abdi laments, and in these few words Bjerkeland evokes the failed adult world, the injustice that plays itself out on children. The story’s brevity and abrupt forcefulness, and the characters’ stalwart courage and love, make this tale unusually compelling.

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