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Book Review: ‘A Season of Light,’ by Julie Iromuanya

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Book Review: ‘A Season of Light,’ by Julie Iromuanya

A SEASON OF LIGHT, by Julie Iromuanya


In Julie Iromuanya’s luminous sophomore novel, “A Season of Light,” a father descends into madness following the news that 276 schoolgirls have been abducted from their classrooms in Nigeria, his place of birth. Until now, Fidelis Ewerike has been a model immigrant. A child soldier of 16 on the losing side of the Nigerian civil war, Fidelis escaped after surviving long-buried horrors as a prisoner of war. He and his girlfriend, Adaobi, married and created a brand-new life in Florida, a life beyond their means but worthy of the future they’d dreamed up for their two sheltered American children. The past has been sealed in a box in the attic for decades, dormant but combustible.

When the novel opens, it is late spring 2014, and Fidelis, now a lawyer in his 60s, has lost the tenuous grip that kept a fragile life in place. Learning of the schoolgirls’ abduction, he can’t help revisiting the war he endured half a century ago: becoming fixated on the “sovereignty of the Biafran nation” and getting in contact with an American “assemblage of aged veterans who planned to one day lead a battalion to the capitol and demand the emancipation of Biafra.”

This dangerous meandering into a past brutality that killed thousands, including members of his family, forces Fidelis to confront the long-concealed memory of Ugochi, his younger sister who disappeared during the war when she was just 13. His mental decline is “swift,” and so is his family’s social plummet, as Fidelis is asked to take an “indefinite leave” from his firm. The Ewerikes lose their “stately home” and move to a housing development “so saturated with decay” that it “could only beget the death of dreams.”

Adaobi at first conspires to hide her husband’s mental state, clinging desperately to her social status and the so-called American dream. When Fidelis witnesses his 16-year-old daughter, Amara, applying her mother’s red lipstick, it dawns on him that his child is on the cusp of adulthood. “Like all men, he had been taught that girls are trouble,” Fidelis thinks upon learning of the Chibok kidnappings. “It was the complicated stillness of these nameless girls’ expressions that haunted him.” Now he decides that the only way to keep Amara safe — his daughter bears an uncanny resemblance to Ugochi — is by force: “He crushed the lipstick in his fist. He cut holes into her leggings and miniskirts, poured bleach on her spaghetti strap camisoles. He threw her cellphone out of the window, and he put a lock on her bedroom door.”

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Iromuanya is a spectacular storyteller. A narrative that could have been dark and foreboding instead has a pronounced brilliance, and a thread of unexpected humor. Adaobi, attempting to find a solution for her family’s downturn, joins the congregation of an albino pastor with a penchant for slapping his parishioners. Amara ends up falling in love with a boy she never would have had she been free to leave her home. And her 14-year-old brother, Chuk, comes closer to understanding their father’s childhood trauma when he is harassed by neighborhood bullies.

There is a halo surrounding this narrative of loss and grief, which for this couple have calcified into guilt. Instead of succumbing to the kind of self-hate that can devour a person “from the inside out, leaving nothing but a carcass,” this family manages to find their way back to one another. Having tried to spare their children knowledge of the past, these parents learn that it is silence that causes the most devastating fracture of all.


A SEASON OF LIGHT | By Julie Iromuanya | Algonquin | 248 pp. | $29

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Do You Recognize These Past Winners of the National Book Award?

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Do You Recognize These Past Winners of the National Book Award?

Welcome to Lit Trivia, the Book Review’s regular quiz about books, authors and literary culture. In honor of the National Book Awards presented by the National Book Association on Nov. 19, this week’s challenge celebrates winners from the past 20 years and asks you to identify a title by a short description of the work. In the five multiple-choice questions below, tap or click on the answer you think is correct. After the last question, you’ll find links to the books if you’d like to do further reading.

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Video: ‘Flesh’ by David Szalay Wins 2025 Booker Prize

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Video: ‘Flesh’ by David Szalay Wins 2025 Booker Prize

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‘Flesh’ by David Szalay Wins 2025 Booker Prize

David Szalay became the first British Hungarian to win the prestigious Booker Prize for his novel “Flesh.”

“I think fiction can take risks. I think it’s one of the things that it can do. It can take aesthetic risks, formal risks, perhaps even moral risks, which many other forms, narrative forms, can’t quite do to the same extent.” “I think all six of the books in the short list really, you know, not — it’s not saying this is the headline theme, but there is that theme of reaching out, wanting a connection.”

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David Szalay became the first British Hungarian to win the prestigious Booker Prize for his novel “Flesh.”

By Shawn Paik

November 11, 2025

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Test Yourself on the Settings Mentioned in These Novels About Road Trips

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Test Yourself on the Settings Mentioned in These Novels About Road Trips

A strong sense of place can deeply influence a story, and in some cases, the setting can even feel like a character itself. This week’s literary geography quiz highlights the starting points or destinations of five novels about road trips. (Even if you aren’t familiar with the book, most questions offer an additional hint about the location.) To play, just make your selection in the multiple-choice list and the correct answer will be revealed. At the end of the quiz, you’ll find links to the books if you’d like to do further reading.

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