Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 26) - Time
Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 26) - Time
TIME
[In A Man of the People Achebe] illuminates today's confused events along the opaque waters of the Niger. Life imitates art, but seldom so promptly on cue. Achebe's book sounds the obituary drums for "the fat-dripping, gummy, eat-and-let-eat regime" that history has extinguished, and makes clear why his still unstable nation should turn to military government. In fact, his novel ends with just such a military coup, the first of many, it seems….
Achebe tells his story through the mouth of Odili Samalu, a sprightly rapscallion—part idealist, part young man on the make—whom it would be tempting to call a colored Candide, except that Odili has no innocence at all, only a naiveté that makes a farce both of his convictions and his ambition. He is, in fact, perhaps the most engaging character in fiction about Africa since the hero of Joyce Cary's Mister Johnson, who was factotum to a white colonial official. (p. 80)
But times...
[The entire page is 386 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Phoebe-Lou Adams
- John Coleman
- Robert C. Healey
- Time
- Phoebe-Lou Adams
- Ronald Christ
- Charles Miller
- ROBERT McDOWELL
- Kate Turkington
- Adrian A. Roscoe
- Bruce King
- John Povey
- The New Yorker
- Ifeanyi A. Menkiti
- The New York Times Book Review
- Joseph Bruchac
- Francis M. Sibley
- G. D. Killam
- Jonathan Peters
- Bruce King
- Copyright
