The latest to the club, Scott Timberg pens a lengthy and thoughtful appreciation of Things Fall Apart for the Los Angeles Times.
The book eventually released, "Things Fall Apart," became a critical hit in Britain as well as the first African novel to break through to the English-speaking world. Not only did it sell -- nearly 10 million copies, in 50 languages -- this slim, understated volume became the one African novel to break, unambiguously, into the often impenetrable Western canon. The book continues to live: High school kids and college students read it for class, while African novelists read it to pursue its ideas and themes.
To literary scholar John Marx of UC Davis, it's "the first novel of the African literary canon, to be sure, but also a key text in the body of writing one needs to know to be literate. I'd say that's the case not only in the English-speaking world but just about everywhere."
Hi Mark!
I must admit I haven't heard of 'Things Fall Apart' and I'll try and get a copy unless you're giving away a copy in 'TEV's Giveaways'.
Cheers,
Coll
Posted by: Coll B. Lue | February 26, 2008 at 08:35 AM
How am I supposed to read the book in the first place if I'm not literate?
Posted by: Amateur Reader | February 26, 2008 at 11:53 AM