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What It Means When a Man Falls from the Sky
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April 2021 - What It Means When a Man Falls from the Sky
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This is an amazing story collection, and I'm now firmly a fan of Ms. Arimah. Beautiful, beautiful writing, and my copy of the book is thick now with pages I've marked. Example from the final story, Redemption: "Girls with fire in their bellies will be forced to drink from a well of correction till the flames die out".





I appreciate all the GR commentary this month and I'm glad almost everyone is enjoying this! I'm currently one story from the end and eager to discuss on Wednesday (though I will be receiving my second vaccine shot that morning, so if I seem a little groggy during our meeting that's why 🥴).
Here's the link again:
https://meet.google.com/ssk-ywba-syc
See you then!
Here's the link again:
https://meet.google.com/ssk-ywba-syc
See you then!

But I haven't even gotten halfway through it, so maybe I'll come up with something.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
1) Which of these stories were your favorites? Which didn't work for you? Why?
2) What are some of the recurring themes of Arimah's stories? Is there a clear message or point here?
3) Did you prefer Arimah's realistic stories or her more speculative ones? Would you prefer if this collection was all in one mode, or did you like the variety?
4) What does this collection have to say about life in Nigeria? In the U.S.? How are these stories similar to or different from other immigrant narratives you've read?
5) Have you read any other Nigerian authors (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Chinua Achebe, Helen Oyeyemi, Akwaeke Emezi, Chigozie Obioma, Nnedi Okorafor, Teju Cole...)? If so, are there any common threads or themes you've noticed? What about major differences?
6) How are families portrayed in Arimah's stories? What about romantic partners? Friends? Is Arimah's view of human relationships more optimistic or pessimistic?
7) Would you consider this a feminist book? Why or why not?
8) What did you make of Arimah's writing style and storytelling? Did it stand out from other authors? Did you find it effective?
9) What are some of the advantages of short story collections over novels? The disadvantages?
10) Would you recommend this book? If Arimah publishes another book, do you think you'll read it?
1) Which of these stories were your favorites? Which didn't work for you? Why?
2) What are some of the recurring themes of Arimah's stories? Is there a clear message or point here?
3) Did you prefer Arimah's realistic stories or her more speculative ones? Would you prefer if this collection was all in one mode, or did you like the variety?
4) What does this collection have to say about life in Nigeria? In the U.S.? How are these stories similar to or different from other immigrant narratives you've read?
5) Have you read any other Nigerian authors (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Chinua Achebe, Helen Oyeyemi, Akwaeke Emezi, Chigozie Obioma, Nnedi Okorafor, Teju Cole...)? If so, are there any common threads or themes you've noticed? What about major differences?
6) How are families portrayed in Arimah's stories? What about romantic partners? Friends? Is Arimah's view of human relationships more optimistic or pessimistic?
7) Would you consider this a feminist book? Why or why not?
8) What did you make of Arimah's writing style and storytelling? Did it stand out from other authors? Did you find it effective?
9) What are some of the advantages of short story collections over novels? The disadvantages?
10) Would you recommend this book? If Arimah publishes another book, do you think you'll read it?

touches on why a concept such as 'Nigerian author' can be misleading:
Simple questions like "What country are you from?" asked of Africans as being somewhat meaningless now. The concept of Afropolitanism tries to suggest alternate questions that will tell more about the cultural mix a person is. Often, people want an idea of someone's cultural background is by this question. Africans can't ignore (no matter how much they'd like) the marks that colonialism has left upon their societies. So a question like "What country are you from?" only has meaning along with questions like "Where did you go to school (e.g., Britain or Nigeria) and "Where do you live now?" (US or Britain). As a whole, these 3 questions tell a lot more than simply the name of the country (like, are you rich, what is your religious background, what tribe are you from, what kind of social system did you grow up with, are you consumer oriented... ) .
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie & Teju Cole are trying to make these questions more meaningful.
Lesley Nneke Arimah is from Eastern Nigeria (probably Ibo). Doesn't seem to have much connection to Western Nigeria/Lagos or Northern Nigeria.

Also, are there links for interviews for Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Teju Cole where they talk specifically about the African experience? I'd be really interested in reading them!
Our discussion will be held on Wednesday, April 21 at 7 pm. Here's the link:
https://meet.google.com/ssk-ywba-syc
P.S. Our Goodreads group has been pretty quiet the last few months, so if you're so inclined please remember to post reading thoughts here as they come to you!