Ishmael Beah, born in 1980 in Sierra Leone, West Africa, is the “New York Times” bestselling author of A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier. The book has been published in over thirty languages and was nominated for a Quill Award in 2007. “Time” magazine named the book as one of the top ten nonfiction books of 2007, ranking it at number three. His work has appeared in “The New York Times Magazine, Vespertine Press, LIT, Parabola”, and numerous academic journals. He is a UNICEF Ambassador and Advocate for Children Affected by War; a member of the Human Rights Watch Children’s Rights Advisory Committee; an advisory board member at the Center for the Study of Youth and Political Violence at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville; visiting scholar at the Center for International Conflict Resolution at Columbia University; visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Center for the Study of Genocide, Conflict Resolution, and Human Rights at Rutgers University; cofounder of the Network of Young People Affected by War (NYPAW); and president of the Ishmael Beah Foundation. He has spoken before the United Nations, the Council on Foreign Relations, and many panels on the effects of war on children. He is a graduate of Oberlin College with a B.A. in Political Science and resides in Brooklyn, New York.
His newest book Radiance of Tomorrow, A Novel (published in January 2014 by Farrar Straus and Giroux) written with the gentle lyricism of a dream and the moral clarity of a fable is a powerful work about preserving what means the most to us, even in uncertain times.