Lopez Lomong

Words: 705
Pages: 3

Lopez Lomong, the author of the book Running for My Life, writes about his fascinating life story in a memoir-like fashion. He starts the book talking about his small town Sudan and getting stolen from his family, and ends the book with getting sponsored by Nike and being allowed to compete with the US Olympic track team. Everything in between is a Whirlwind of emotional roller coasters, friendships, broken and unbroken family relationships, and challenges to compete to be the greatest. Lopez inspires the reader to dig further into what happened with The Lost Boys and narrates the attitude of how many troubles were realistic from the perspective of a six-year-old child. From the very first two chapters, the reader knows that this book is going …show more content…
there were a lot more children than envisioned. According to the article The Forgotten Children of Sudan- part 1, in the year 1991, the numbers were between 17,000 and 25,000 children (the forgotten). Continuing through the book, once Lopez escapes from Ethiopia, he runs with three of his friends, whom he refers to as his Three Angels. He also mentions how we didn't wait for it to go down before taking off. Just like the day before, we started running when the shadows grew long and the sun was low in the sky (Lomong 27). This is significant because Lopez and his Three Angels didn't know what they were running from, but they knew they just had to run forward. In reality, The Lost Boys would be running from Ethiopia to Kakuma. That is roughly 1,084 km, which is 673.56 mi. For reference, that's like running from Redding, California to San Diego, California. In a car, the fastest route would take 9 hours and 33 minutes via Apple Maps. This information can express the great depth of what Lopez went through in more modern terms. When readers proceed to the middle of the book, they are faced with the fact that Lopez is now in a foreign country, where he does not know how to communicate nor understand the culture very