Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 26) - The Times Literary Supplement
Achebe, Chinua (Vol. 26) - The Times Literary Supplement
THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
Mr. Achebe is a young Nigerian. In Things Fall Apart, his first novel, he draws a fascinating picture of tribal life among his own people at the end of the nineteenth century. His literary method is apparently simple, but a vivid imagination illuminates every page, and his style is a model of clarity. He has chosen a very cunning way of getting as much authentic background into his story as he can, by making his hero a powerful and egocentric social climber who exploits every possibility of tribal life….
The great interest of this novel is that it genuinely succeeds in presenting tribal life from the inside. Patterns of feeling and attitudes of mind appear clothed in a distinctively African imagery, written neither up nor down…. We are made to share the African's experience of his masked gods, his oracles, and even his weather.
Only at the end of the book, when the European missionaries appear on the scene,...[The entire page is 249 words long]
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