literature 1-2

Try now

Things Fall Apart (Everyman's Library) Chinua Achebe

Things Fall Apart (Everyman's Library) Chinua Achebe

Synopsis

The nineteen fifty-eight novel chronicles the life of Okonkwo, the leader of an Igbo (Ibo) community, from the events leading up to his banishment from the community for accidentally killing a clansman, through the seven years of his exile, to his return. Addresses the problem of the intrusion in the eighteen nineties of white missionaries and colonial government into tribal

Igbo society, and describes the simultaneous disintegration of its protagonist Okonkwo and of his village. The novel was praised for its intelligent and realistic treatment of tribal beliefs and of psychological disintegration coincident with social unraveling. Things Fall Apart helped create the Nigerian literary renaissance of the nineteen sixties.

Achebe's most famous novel brilliantly portrays the impact of colonialism on a traditional Nigerian village at the turn of the century. Its hero, Obi Okonkwo, epitomizes both the nobility and the rigidity of the traditional culture.

Biography

Biography

Chinua Achebe was born in Nigeria in nineteen thirty. He was raised in the large village of Ogidi, one of the first centers of

Anglican missionary work in Eastern Nigeria, and is a graduate of University College,

Ibadan. Cited in the London

Sunday Times as one of the "one thousand Makers of the Twentieth Century" for defining "a modern African literature that was truly African" and thereby making "a major contribution to world literature, " Chinua Achebe has published novels short stories, essays, and children's books. His volume of poetry, Christmas in Biafra, written during the Biafran War,

was the joint winner of the first Commonwealth Poetry Prize. Of his novels, Arrow of God won the New Statesman -- Jock Campbell Award, and Anthills of the Savannah was a finalist for the nineteen eighty-seven Booker Prize. Things Fall Apart, Chinua

Achebe's masterpiece, has been published in fifty different languages and has sold millions of copies in the United

States since its original publication in nineteen fifty-eight to nineteen fifty-nine. Mr. Achebe lives with his wife in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York,

where they teach at Bard College. They have four children and three grandchildren. Things Fall Apart

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

literature 1-2