MORE THINGS FALL APART
Carlin Romano considers the "unique literary and academic phenomenon" that is Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart.
For many readers today, Achebe's story of Okonkwo, the "strong man" of an Ibo village in Nigeria whose life goes to pieces amid an influx of British colonialists who change his world forever, now stands with classic tales of Greek drama and English literature as a cornerstone of the literary universe.
While Achebe welcomes the prominence his novel has achieved, he says he tries to keep it in perspective, true to an Ibo aphorism of his father's that recognizes life's pros and cons: "Wherever something stands, something else stands beside it."

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