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A Season of Light by Julie Iromuanya

Literary fiction

A Season of Light

by Julie Iromuanya

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Quick take

How far will we go for love? In this fervent, nail-biting family saga, the line between madness and devotion blurs.

Highbrow

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Multiple_Viewpoints

    Multiple viewpoints

  • Illustrated icon, Family_Drama

    Family drama

  • Illustrated icon, Immigration

    Immigration

  • Illustrated icon, War

    War

Synopsis

When 276 schoolgirls are abducted from their school in Nigeria, Fidelis Ewerike, a Florida-based barrister, poet, and former POW of the Nigerian Civil War, begins to go mad. Consumed by memories of his younger sister, Ugochi, who went missing during that conflict and fearful that the same fate awaits Amara, his sixteen-year-old daughter—who bears an uncanny resemblance to Ugochi—Fidelis locks her in her bedroom and offers no explanation.

As a result of that singular action, the Ewerike family spirals into chaos. After unsuccessful attempts to free her daughter from her room, Fidelis’s wife, Adaobi, seeks the counsel of a preacher, praying for spiritual liberation from the curse she is certain has plagued her family since leaving Nigeria. Fourteen-year-old Chuk, beset by his own war with the neighborhood boys, receives a painful education on force, masculinity, and his tenuous position within his family. And rebellious, resentful Amara is hungry for her life to be hers, so the moment she escapes her imprisonment, she falls in love—not with the Nigerian-born engineer-in-training her mother wanted, but with Maksym Kostyk, the son of the town drunk. Before long, the two have concocted a plan to run away. But for all that they have endured and for all that they’re tempted to forsake, the Ewerikes find that their bonds run deeper and stronger than they ever knew.

Content warning

This book contains scenes depicting child abuse and domestic abuse and mentions of sexual assault.

Free sample

Get an early look from the first pages of A Season of Light.

A Season of Light

One

Fidelis

Everyone in Econlockhatchee always said Mr. Kostyk was a little cracked. When the Ewerikes arrived, everyone said the same about Fidelis Ewerike. One night 276 schoolgirls were taken from the Government Girls Secondary School in the town of Chibok in Borno State, Nigeria, and he was never the same again. Even in America, far from his homeland, his dreams became a menace. In daylight, he could be less afraid. To prove it, he would playact merriment—shrill laughter, song, dance—at such a frenzied pitch that there was a thrill in senility; by night he would walk.

Like all men, he had been taught that girls are trouble. For some, trouble leads to desire. And so, in a way, he did not quite blame the men for the attack. He blamed the girls, but not for their beauty or innocence or their just-budded breasts. In the photographs, he looked past their uniformity—their youth, the dusk and navy cloths draped from head to toe—and into their faces. Each night as he walked, it was the complicated stillness of these nameless girls’ expressions that haunted him.

Looking at them looking at him—in the photograph, on the television, on the websites, and, at last, in his nightmares—was like his past, his present, and his future had aligned, and here he was caught unawares in its flush light. When she had first seen the girls in the news, his wife, Adaobi, had wept, pulling their daughter, Amarachi, into her embrace; his son, Chukwudiegwu, had only sighed. Fidelis walked.

He did not feel pity, not exactly, not even empathy, for the schoolgirls; instead, there was something useless and angry inside him that urged him to pluck them from a part of the world that he had once, long ago, called home, and place them within his protection. He did not yet know that one can confuse protection with possession.

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Why I love it

There will always be those special stories that linger in your mind long after you’ve left them—lines echoing in your ears, images floating in the corners of your subconscious. Ever since I finished A Season of Light, I haven’t stopped thinking about this portrait of a family tangled in a deep web of intergenerational trauma.

A Season of Light centers around Fidelis Ewerike, a Nigerian-born, Florida-based lawyer. When Fidelis learns of the abduction of hundreds of Nigerian schoolgirls, he is reminded of the terror he experienced during the Nigerian Civil War, when he lost his beloved sister and suffered as a prisoner of war. In a daze, Fidelis locks his teenaged daughter, Amara, in her room, guided by the misplaced aim of protecting her. At first, Fidelis’s wife and son believe this is only a temporary fit of madness…but weeks pass, and Amara is still a prisoner within their home.

In this book, author Julie Iromuanya pulls off a dazzling literary feat, building a sense of empathy and understanding through exquisite characters and weighty, authentic interpersonal dynamics. A Season of Light is a masterpiece of literary fiction, and will stay with you long after you’ve put it down.

Member ratings (2)

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February selections
View all
Black Woods, Blue Sky
Penitence
Good Dirt
Famous Last Words
First-Time Caller
The Bones Beneath My Skin
A Season of Light