Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Paperback Book

Details

Rent Things Fall Apart

Author: Chinua Achebe

Format: Paperback

Publisher: Random House Inc

Published: Sep 1994

Genre: Fiction - Literary

Retail Price: $15.00

Pages: 224

Synopsis

This is Chinua Achebes classic novel, with more than two million copies sold since its first U.S. publication in 1969. Combining a richly African story with the author's keen awareness of the qualities common to all humanity, Achebe here shows that he is

View descriptions at Amazon.com

Recommended

The Guernsey Literary and...
by Mary Ann Shaffer

January 1946: writer Juliet Ashton receives a letter from a stranger, a founding member of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. And so...

Light on Snow
by Anita Shreve

A brilliant and beautiful contemporary novel about love and memory from the author of the bestselling novels All He Ever Wanted and The Pilots...

Water for Elephants
by Sara Gruen

Jacob Jankowski, 90 years old and living in a nursing home, tells how, orphaned and penniless during the Great Depression, he became an animal trainer...

Fall On Your Knees...
by Ann-Marie MacDonald

...Ann-Marie MacDonald writes of several generations of a Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia family in this resonant first novel....Ms. MacDonald...

Icy Sparks (Oprah's Book...
by Gwyn Hyman Rubio

Set in 1956, this is the story of Icy, a 10-year-old girl with Tourette's syndrome who has been raised in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky by her...

Vanishing Acts
by Jodi Picoult

Delia Hopkins is living a placid enough life in New Hampshire with her little daughter, and is about to finally marry the child's father, Eric, a...

Nineteen Minutes
by Jodi Picoult

Best known for tackling controversial issues through richly told fictional accounts, Jodi Picoult's 14th novel, Nineteen Minutes, deals with the...

The Road (Oprah's Book...
by Cormac McCarthy

A searing, postapocalyptic novel destined to become Cormac McCarthy's masterpiece. A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing...

Reviews

BookLender review by Sharon on 2009-08-28 16:01:36

I fail to see what was so great about this book. It is so simple a story that it literally falls apart. The author describes some things about African culture, but not enough to make it interesting. I kept waiting for some great revelation, or insight,wisdom,something, but never found it.