Browse all books

Books with author Chinua Achebe

  • Things Fall Apart: With Connections

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (HOLT MCDOUGAL, Oct. 20, 1999)
    None
  • Anthills of the Savannah by Chinua Achebe by Chinua Achebe

    Chinua Achebe

    Hardcover (Anchor Books, Jan. 1, 1987)
    None
  • Girls at War and Other Stories

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Penguin Books, May 1, 2010)
    None
  • Anthills of the Savannah

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Gardners Books, Sept. 30, 1988)
    None
  • How the Leopard Got His Claws by Achebe, Chinua

    Chinua Achebe

    Hardcover (Candlewick, Aug. 16, 1800)
    How the Leopard Got His Claws by Achebe, Chinua [Candlewick, 2011] Hardcover ...
  • Things Fall Apart

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Astor-Honor Inc, March 1, 1959)
    Okonkwo suffers much to gain a high position in his Nigerian village
  • Anthills of the Savannah

    Chinua Achebe, Maya Jaggi

    eBook (Penguin, April 25, 2013)
    '[The writer] in whose company the prison walls fell down' - Nelson Mandela. After a long silence Achebe published in 1987 what many see as his greatest work - an acrid, frightening look at oil-boom Nigeria, a world of robberies, road blocks and intimidation in which those who are meant to be protecting a country's citizens are in reality supervising the looting.
  • Girls at War and Other Stories

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Heinemarnn Educational, March 15, 1972)
    This collection of short stories includes three set in the Biafran war.
  • Things Fall Apart

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Fawcett Premier----t450, March 15, 1959)
    Chinua Achebe describes "Things Fall Apart" as a response to Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness", which is, comparatively, a denser, perhaps less accessible read. The parallels are there: the ominous drumbeats Marlow describes as mingling with his heartbeat are here given a source and a context. We, as readers, are invited into the lives of the Ibo clan in Nigeria. We learn their customs, their beliefs, terms from their language. Okonkwo, the main character, is the perfect anti-hero. He is maybe Achebe's ultimate creation: flawed, angry, deeply afraid but outwardly fierce. To have given us a perfect hero would have been to sell the story of these people drastically short. Achebe's great achievement is in rendering them as humans, people we can identify with. So they don't dress like Americans, or share our religious beliefs. Who's to say which method is correct, or if there has to be a correct and incorrect way. Achebe provokes thoughtfulness and important questions. His narrative is easy to read structurally, but the story itself is painful and frustrating. It is worthy of its subject.
  • Anthills of the Savannah

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Penguin Classics, Jan. 1, 1600)
    None
  • Things Fall Apart

    Chinua Achebe

    Paperback (Anchor Books, )
    Excellent Book
  • Things fall apart

    Chinua Achebe

    Hardcover (William Heinemann Ltd., March 15, 1958)
    THINGS FALL APART tells two overlapping, intertwining stories, both of which center around Okonkwo, a "strong man" of an Ibo village in Nigeria. The first of these stories traces Okonkwo's fall from grace with the tribal world in which he lives, and in its classical purity of line and economical beauty it provides us with a powerful fable about the immemorial conflict between the individual and society. The second story, which is as modern as the first is ancient, and which elevates the book to a tragic plane, concerns the clash of cultures and the destruction of Okonkwo's world through the arrival of aggressive, proselytizing European missionaries. These twin dramas are perfectly harmonized, and they are modulated by an awareness capable of encompassing at once the life of nature, human history, and the mysterious compulsions of the soul. THINGS FALL APART is the most illuminating and permanent monument we have to the modern African experience as seen from within.