“When you tell a story, you give it out to the world and whoever listens becomes a part of that story.” Ishmael Beah, raised a war child and now a published author, is very aware of the impact that words can have. Beah published his memoir in 2007, and with it relays the power of stories to influence people. Thus, stories are significant in A Long Way Gone, as they are used to symbolize hope, introduce a new perspective for the reader, and reflect the memoir’s themes. Throughout Beah’s life as a refugee and war child, stories became an anchor for him. They had the power to help him temporarily escape the horrors of reality. Musa’s Bra Spider stories, for instance, were well-known already, but the boys continued to listen because they wanted to forget …show more content…
“I concluded to myself that if I were the hunter, I would shoot the monkey so that it would no longer have the chance to put other hunters in the same predicament.” This story and Beah’s answer perfectly embodies the theme of self-sacrifice for the greater good. While no doubt losing his mother would be disastrous, Beah would choose that over letting other people suffer over losing their parents as well. Self-sacrifice is a theme that is always present in A Long Way Gone. The workers who took Beah and the other boys to a rehabilitation center sacrificed their time and, possibly, their lives. Esther the nurse sacrificed her mental well-being by listening to so many war stories and trying to help each damaged war child. Many of the villages and people who cared for Beah sacrificed their shelter, money, or physical well-being. Beah going to the UN conference and speaking out about the horrors of raising children as war soldiers was a sacrifice. It can also be said that Beah, by joining the government army, believed he was also sacrificing his life to stop the rebels, avenge his family, and bring peace back to his