Where to Start with Chinua Achebe
Chinua Achebe was born in 1930 in the Igbo town of Ogidi during British colonial rule in Nigeria. He grew up between two worlds, his parents’ Christianity and his grandparents’ traditional Igbo culture, and that duality runs through everything he wrote. He is widely regarded as the father of modern African literature, the writer who first told an African story from the inside with the full weight and complexity it deserved. His fiction spans Nigeria’s colonial period, independence, civil war, and postcolonial corruption, always with a sharp eye for how power operates and who it leaves behind.
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Things Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe · 209 pages · 1958 · Easy
Themes: colonialism, tradition, masculinity, cultural identity, change
The most important African novel ever written. Achebe tells the story of Okonkwo, a proud Igbo warrior and community leader, as his world is upended by the arrival of British missionaries and colonial administrators.
Why Start Here
“Things Fall Apart” was Achebe’s first novel, written when he was just 28, and it remains his masterpiece. He wrote it partly in response to European fiction about Africa, particularly Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness,” which portrayed the continent as a place of savagery and darkness. Achebe’s response was not an argument but a demonstration: here is a world as rich, complex, and contradictory as any in European literature.
The genius of the novel is its balance. Okonkwo is not a simple hero. His obsession with strength and his fear of resembling his gentle, artistic father drive him to acts of cruelty that the novel does not excuse. And the colonial project is not presented as pure evil. Some villagers welcome the missionaries. The tragedy is not that one side is wrong but that two ways of understanding the world cannot coexist, and the one with more power wins.
The prose draws on Igbo proverbs and oral traditions without ever feeling like an anthropological exercise. Achebe once said that proverbs are “the palm oil with which words are eaten,” and his writing proves it.
What to Expect
A compact, precisely structured novel in three parts. Part one immerses you in pre-colonial Igbo life. Part two follows Okonkwo in exile. Part three brings the full force of colonialism. The ending is one of the most devastating in all of literature: quiet, controlled, and absolutely unforgettable. At 209 pages, it is a book you can finish in a day but will think about for years.