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β€œA true classic of world literature . . . A masterpiece that has inspired generations of writers in Nigeria, across Africa, and around the world.” —Barack ObamaΒ β€œAfrican literature is incomplete and unthinkable without the works of Chinua Achebe.” —Toni MorrisonNominated as one of America’s best-loved novels by PBS’s The Great American ReadThings Fall Apart is the first of three novels in Chinua Achebe's critically acclaimed African Trilogy. I

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Book ID Asin: 0385474547
Book Title: Things Fall Apart
Book Author: Chinua Achebe
Book Format and Price:
Book Format Name: Kindle
Book Format Price: $10.69
Book Format Name: Hardcover
Book Format Price: $20.99
Book Format Name: Paperback
Book Format Price: $12.49
Book Format Name: Mass Market Paperback
Book Format Price: $49.99
Book Format Name: Audio CD
Book Format Price: $32.37
Book Price: $12.49
Book Category: Books, Literature & Fiction, Genre Fiction and unknown
Book Rating: 5,882 ratings

Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Book Review

Name: S. Ward
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: InthisEnglishprofessorsalltimetopfive
Date: Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2016
Review: One of the best books I've ever read, in my top five of all time, and I'm an English professor, so you know I've done some reading. I believe I read it in a matter of two or three hours the first time because I was desperate to know what was going to happen to Okonkwo and his kin with the invasion of European colonization. Do not be put off by what you may have heard about the violence and/or cruelty; there are a few parts where the content is a little rough, but the unflinching lack of sentimentalism - the matter-of-fact tone - makes the events tolerable. I teach a lot of folks who are older teens/early twenties, and honestly, I don't think this is a book that should be taught in high school or at the undergrad level because I think it actually helps to have some life behind you when you read it for the first time. If I knew in advance (which I never do) that I was going to have a class full of people over thirty, I would use it in a class without question. I would also say it's a must-read for men because of its powerful depictions of the conflicts between fathers, sons, and just male kinship relationships in general. Achebe also gives great insight into two strong powerful female characters, his second wife and one of his daughters, even though they have a minimal amount of page time.

Name: J. C. B.
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Beautifullywrittenbutfailedtotouchme
Date: Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2019
Review: This was a novel that I looked forward to reading, but it just didn't touch me, either intellectually or emotionally. The writing is beautiful and the story unfolds like a fable, but not a very memorable fable. The main character, Okonowo, a tribal chieftain, is not an admirable or particularly interesting person. He is brutal, full of himself and not very complex. His actions are predictable and never surprise you and you feel absolutely nothing when his inevitable downfall comes late in the novel. None of the other characters in the novel stand out and the female characters seem poorly developed. There are endless discussions in the novel about the cultivation and economics of yams. I don't get why the author spent so much time discussing yams. The novel was short and read quickly, so I don't regret giving it a try. Not liking something you read is the sign that you have at least have some sense of taste.

Name: Brandon Scott Pilcher
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: AmoreengagingcritiqueofEuropeanimperialismthanConradsHeartofDarkness
Date: Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2019
Review: The first thing I ever read by Chinua Achebe was his harsh review of Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness", which I enjoyed since I myself found Conrad's book boring, pretentious, and offensive. That inspired me to check out Achebe's own novel "Things Fall Apart", which critiques European imperialism in Africa from a Nigerian Igbo perspective. And you have to admit, if you're going to read a critique of imperialist activity, the best perspective to investigate is that of the victims'.Admittedly, the first half of the novel does read more like an ethnographic account of daily Igbo life in the precolonial period than a conventionally structured novel. I still found it a fascinating and informative window into their culture, and it is nonetheless essential in characterizing the protagonist Okonkwo as well as demonstrating the damage that the British invasion of Nigeria will inflict in the second half of the book. To appreciate how things are going to fall apart for the Igbo community here, you need to understand what it was that would be broken in the first place.If there was one aspect of the novel that I did not enjoy as much as the rest, it was that Okonkwo was a bit hard to like due to his sexist prejudice and the way he would beat his wives and children as punishment. He's not a one-dimensional brute for sure, and the book explains early on that he developed his attitude to avoid resembling a father he viewed as cowardly and impotent. Still, it might be rather upsetting for readers who have experienced domestic violence or abuse.

Name: Chi
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Deceptivelysimplestorytellingportrayspostcolonialangstandfostersbiculturalfamilychats
Date: Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2019
Review: This is not so much a review of the book as it is a brief commentary of its personal and broader relevance. As a Nigerian-American, I can honestly say that Things Fall Apart is one of the most important books I've ever read. I read it in secondary school in Nigeria 30 years ago and most of it was lost on me because we were forced to read, memorize, and regurgitate its contents to pass exams. We did not have much have a chance to extract and discuss the WEALTH of knowledge that Chinua Achebe unfurls in this book.Fast-forward to last week in the US when something kept telling me to order another copy (I've lived in a few countries, including Nigeria, and always feel compelled to buy this book anywhere I live but never find time to read it). So, I ordered yet another hard copy and then saw Amazon's Kindle deal while the first copy was in transit in the post. It was a no-brainer -- the Kindle version would solve my traveling woes! Moreover, I devoured it in 3 days! Then I discussed certain passages with my parents whose grandparents would have been Okonkwo's peers and this precipitated priceless family discussions, taking my parents back to their respective childhoods.Having been born in the US, I can count the number of times that we've tried to have similar discussions that ended up falling flat. I believe my re-reading of Achebe's book, plus my mother's grand decision to transplant me from the US and enroll me in a Nigerian secondary school decades ago, FINALLY helped us share and construct parts of our family's historical story's center that had never really had the chance to come together -- not to talk of fall apart.The novel also elicited compassion from me that gets buried (far) beneath the frustration at present-day Nigeria, which I've recently lived in and visit often. In Things Fall Apart, Achebe describes this functional society -- sure, without the technological advances of iron horses and Western education -- but functional enough to maintain law and order, as well as family and community (kinship) structures. My parents say that they remember some of those days and now I understand the heartbreak and ambivalence they must feel when they look at Nigeria today.I also finished the book with more compassion towards pre-colonial worshippers of traditional or cultural gods. Achebe cleverly shows that it wasn't much different from Christianity other than the multiplicity of mediator gods and the exclusion of certain groups and the sad, unfortunate mistreatment of twins. (My parents have a family friend who was an only child because his mother had given birth to FOUR sets of twins -- all of whom were you-know-what). As a Christian, I can easily rattle off the vast differences but sometimes it's helpful to look at similarities, so you can understand where people are coming from and why they see things the way they do, and therefore do the things they do. The Igbos were just one ethnic groups in Nigeria that had to make decisions and adjustments to literally abandon who they were. Never mind how many other groups had to do the same across the entire country and continent!Finally, I was struck by how certain elements of this 60 year-old novel foreshadows aspects of present-day Nigeria. In particular, the part about the colonial government messengers and 250 cowries had me howling out loud! Obviously, I don't want to give it away, so please feel free to share your thoughts on this aspect after you've read the book!While I understand Chimamanda Adichie's warning not to heed to the narrative of a single story, Things Fall Apart is one story that I am proud to say represents an aspect of my heritage superbly. Achebe should have won the Nobel Peace Prize for Literature because of the understanding Things Fall Apart presumably fostered between colonized peoples and their colonizers, between colonized people in general, and between people around the world in a much broader sense -- and still does.In short: I simply adore this book and hope you do, too!

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