Mene is a boy from the village of Dukana, Nigeria. Apprentice drive, he lives with his mom. The civil war approaches. He met in the nearby town a pretty girl, Agnes, "Agnes with JJC" (you'll have to read the book to understand! ) Born in Dukana, and having lived in Lagos. Of course, he wants to marry her. To please Agnes with JJC , he will wear a uniform, singing military songs, and like Zaza, the soza (soldier) who went to Burma (Myanmar) a long time ago to hunt "Hitla" and since, is admired throughout the village, he will become a soza too. But "war is war" : he will be enrolled by the "enemy" (the rebels). Then he wants to find his mother and his beautiful wife, Agnes with JJC.
In a nutshell the story of Mene, "Sozaboy" , told by himself, ie with a limited vocabulary, a "local" English, and, which gives the full power to the story, without specifying time or place, like most uneducated children of African villages would. In a word, the style is naive in the extreme.
Of course one easily guesses it takes place during the Biafra civil war, but in the end it doesn't matter. This could be any conflict on the continent.
For those who went to villages in West Africa, the story is even more touching: I could recognize the simplistic logic of the poor farmers, and some social aspects of the villages: the belief in the magic, the importance given to rumors, the weight of tradition etc.. And then I also recognized a kind of "insensitivity" that I would not be able so much to describe: Of course when Mene suffers, he wants to escape, but there is no emotional description of deaths or horrors of the civil war, as if he didn't realize the importance of suffering. Sozaboy is tossed from one place to another, depending on the circumstances, without realizing what happens to him or understanding the global context. This behavior is fairly typical, again, among the least educated villagers (in the sense "who have not gone to school"). And of course, as the story masterfully shows, they are also the most vulnerable toward all kinds of excesses: they are either placed on the side of the oppressors or oppressed by the circumstances, the good will of the authorities or a powerful men, all corrupted. But there is no Manichaeism at ll: Mene would be incapable of such thoughts. Besides the "Dukana people" can be terribly cruel.
To summary, the story is wonderful, incredibly powerful.