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I loved this book. Chinua Achebe writes a sad and melancholic tale about a man called Okonkwo in a small African tribal village called Umuofia. Okonkwo is a man feared and respected by everyone in his village and beyond. He is a wrestling champion and man who enjoys fame and respect because of his hard work. He is a self made man. His father was considered a looser because he did not work very hard to sustain his crops and did nothing else but play music and laze around. He died as an outcast.
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This was my Kansas high school's token acknowledgment that there is such a thing as African Lit. Achebe takes the formula for Greek tragedy and then overlays it with a fascinating and richly detailed cultural exposition about life in pre-colonial Nigeria amongst the Ibo tribe. The matter-of-fact prose slowly gives away to a tale about the downfall of a proud man and his families legacy in the face of colonialism. Cue teenage feelings of faux white guilt.
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I had never read any literature from Africa, but read this one because of "Literatures of English Expression" subject. It seemed weird in the beginning, but this feeling disappeared as soon as I got used to the author's style. I think this happened because instead of starting with something happening in the story, it starts with somebody's description, followed by another character's description, and you have no connection with those characters, so you don't feel like going on in your reading. H
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Great book, truly one of the best books I've ever read.
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Aug 29, 2008
Abigail (42stitches)
marked it as to-read

Sep 24, 2009
John J.
marked it as to-read

Jul 26, 2010
Courtney
marked it as to-read

Jul 31, 2013
Kirstie Peden
marked it as to-read
