This audiobook, vividly imagined by journalist Omar El Akkad and narrated by Dion Graham, transports listeners to a near-future America ravaged by war…Graham infuses the Chestnuts’ story with urgency and heart, and he reads the official documents recounting the war with chilling veracity—making this dystopian vision of America feel all too real.”
AudioFile
An April 2017 LibraryReads Pick
A BookPage Top Pick for April 2017
An Amazon Editor’s Top Pick for April 2017
An Entertainment Weekly Pick for April
Longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction
Finalist for the 2018 Indies Choice Book Award for Best Audiobook
Shortlisted for the 2018 Arthur C. Clarke Award
Winner of the 2018 Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award
A London Guardian Pick of the Top 10 Books of Eco-Fiction
Among shortlisted titles for James Tait Black Memorial Prize, 2018
“Powerful . . . As haunting a postapocalyptic universe as Cormac McCarthy [created] in The Road, and as devastating a look as the fallout that national events have on an American family as Philip Roth did in The Plot Against America. . . . Omar El Akkad’s debut novel, American War, is an unlikely mash-up of unsparing war reporting and plot elements familiar to readers of the recent young-adult dystopian series The Hunger Games and Divergent.”—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times An audacious and powerful debut novel: a second American Civil War, a devastating plague, and one family caught deep in the middle—a story that asks what might happen if America were to turn its most devastating policies and deadly weapons upon itself. Sarat Chestnut, born in Louisiana, is only six when the Second American Civil War breaks out in 2074. But even she knows that oil is outlawed, that Louisiana is half underwater, and that unmanned drones fill the sky. When her father is killed and her family is forced into Camp Patience for displaced persons, she begins to grow up shaped by her particular time and place. But not everyone at Camp Patience is who they claim to be. Eventually Sarat is befriended by a mysterious functionary, under whose influence she is turned into a deadly instrument of war. The decisions that she makes will have tremendous consequences not just for Sarat but for her family and her country, rippling through generations of strangers and kin alike.