Americanah
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Buddy Read Carol, Sofia and Maya - June 5, 2016
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Sofia
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rated it 4 stars
Jun 10, 2016 12:06AM

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Yay it's Friday!!!
Blaine - i am curious too, Carol. My bet is that he didn't call because she's an immigrant and he's African American and the difference scared him. But maybe it's something much more trivial, we'll see - as Sofia said we'll meet him again soon.
Curt: well, i think it's clear Ifemelu is preparing us for the break up. She's gradually getting to know him better and the things she liked before now annoy her. The incident with his emails to that other woman are not to be ignored too - he may just be seeking attention but that reveals certain selfishness and carelessness. Still last night when i read the end of chapter 22 when he said he wanted to be the love of her life my initial reaction was that ifemelu is not honest with what she's telling us about him, that he's way more sensitive and sagacious than she's letting on. I have doubts now, i guess i'll wait and see.
Reading about Obinze now.

Yes ok - we only know the people here through Ifemelu's eyes all that is except Obinze.

surprised?"
Clotilde - I only knew of Kosi

I hear you Maya
I see much similarities here in the Nigerians outward looks. The outside being a better place which effect both those who leave and those who stay.

Maya, I also loved chapter 30. (view spoiler)
I am at chapter 34 right now. (view spoiler)

We've spent a week with Adichie and I've gotten into a rhythm with it. It's a long book and not the sort i can gulp down quickly as i usually do.
I'm at chap 36 - quiet and listening.
Maya we had set The Orphan Master's Son for tomorrow. I don't know if we should postpone or read in tandem with this one. What do you think?

I'm good to start any day from Monday on incl. Up to you :)

Although I like how openly she criticizes life styles both in America and in Nigeria, her easy dismissal of opinions different to hers is ... well, quite arrogant.

Still trying to sort out my feelings about the book so I'm eager to chat with you.

I think I will finish this evening, so we can chat. :)

But you're about to read the most intense part of the book (imo) so it's best that we discuss after, I think, when we all have the full picture.


I am extremely interested in your final verdict.:)
BTW, this is the blog about what comes after the ending: https://americanahblog.com/

I've read your notes Carol and nodded.
I :
Could not read this for long stretches. If it had been shorter it might have been tighter. On the otherhand the long approach gave us a real feel of the people.
I liked Obinze more than Ifemelu. She is one with strong opinions and often these are not gentle, or compassionate. At the same time i liked reading her blog observations.
Their story did not remain idyllic because of Obinze's marriage but any otber outcome would not have felt true. At the same time i wish that Ifem had loved both of them enough to jump over that night.
Waiting to see what i think of it after i sleep on it.

What was very interesting in these interviews is that she said she wanted Ifemelu to be the opposite of the female characters that were in the romances she read as a teen where the women never acted but had to wait for the men to make advances i.e. the development of the relationship was always in the hands of the men. And at the same time she wanted that happy ending that such romances had but the way the characters reached that ending had to be completely different. So Ifemelu is not only open about her sexuality but she takes the initiative, if she is attracted to a man she acts. In one of the interviews she asked: what if Ifemelu was the male character? Would that change our perspective and dislike of her? And I think she definitely has a point here. It is a different question, of course, if Adichie succeeded to present this message convincingly with her writing – I think maybe not entirely.
She talked about the typical Nigerian woman and how she’s raised to desire marriage and be a good wife when it is also typical for the Nigerian husband to have a mistress. And I think that was Kosi in the book – complete opposite of Ifemelu who in the end begs her husband to stay on her knees with no dignity left. And we saw Aunty Uju and other friends of Ifemelu in the roles of the mistress.
Adichie said that her Nigerian readers criticized her the most about writing Ifemelu stealing Kosi’s husband while at the same time they never thought Obinze was at fault for ruining the marriage. She was also criticized about writing such good boyfriends for Ifemelu – always caring and sweet men who Ifemelu left with no good reason and again she said that was on purpose. Which again, I think she aimed to make a very point that the woman can break up a relationship for no other reason than simply not feeling good or completely herself in that relationship but for me again remains the question if she wrote that convincingly or if my not fully understanding Ifemelu’s actions was because of my view of intimate relationships.
So I understand what Adichie goal was with Ifemelu but at the same time Ifemelu being mostly the observer in the book, a characters that usually seems so removed from the events (with the exception of when the story is about Dike and Obinze) made it difficult to connect.
As for Obnze – she said she wrote him as the perfect vision of a boyfriend she has and I think we can feel that in the book, the author loved his characters and she transferred that love to me as a reader.

About her social commentary - the discussions on race and immigration - I loved all of these including the blog posts and the hair metaphors. I saw in some reviews people saying that all the commentary happened in conversations with faceless characters that disappeared as soon as they appeared on page and that maybe Adichie should have thought of other ways to present these comments and I definitely think they have a point here but I must say this didn't take away from my reading experience.
I also think the secondary characters suffered from Ifemelu's tendency to judge quickly and simply present us with her view of them when instead we could've made these observations by ourselves, and that for me is one of the weaknesses of the book. Especially when it comes to Curt, Blaine and Aunty Uju.

Did you come across her wanting this to be a humorous book, i came across it in a review? I did not find it so.
Another point. When we read Baldwin he talks about how the history of the American Black is closer to the American white than to the African Black. This was really evident her. I'm thinking of the Mr White incident how Ifem did not attend. I still wonder why she didn't.
I

First: she couldn't/didn't want to let go of her personal dislike of him.
Second: she got annoyed that Blaine assumed this cause was as important to her as it was for him and that she undoubtedly would be there. So her choice not to attend was to show Blaine her opinion can be different than his.



Sofia, I also did not think that the book was humorous. It had way too many difficult experiences and tragic events in it.
Some of the blog posts were funny, but in a harsh/biting way.
I just read "Things Fall Apart", and I can recommend it, too. It is about an Igbo-tribe around 1900 and what happens to it with the advent of British colonialism.

I'm going with 4 stars for this one. Despite its flaws I was always eager to return to the book when I had to put it down and I'm even a little sad it's over.

I also did not read it, because the blog entries did not interest me enough. Sometimes I do not want to know what happens after the end of a book.

I'm interested in reading her Purple Hibiscus
You're a quick reader Carol :-)


I am also interested in The Heart of the Matter. I only read The third Man when I stayed in Vienna for some months. It was okay, but not especially brilliant or moving.

yes, sounds interesting. I'm in.

I also did not read it, because the blog entries did not interest me..."
thanks, Carol. I read couple of the blogs in the Ceiling and Ifem section and I wish I didn't. The Kosi hate was unnecessary.

I'll hold your hand on The Heart of The Matter as well Maya. I've never read him.


And yes, in Things Fall Apart, it is British missionaries and ambassadors disrupting the life of those Igbo tribes.

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