The Road to the Country
by Chigozie Obioma
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"At first the vision is grainy-like something seen through wet glass. But slowly it clears, and there appears the figure of a man. When Kunle's younger brother disappears as his country explodes in civil war, Kunle must set out on an impossible rescue mission behind enemy lines. Set in Nigeria in the late 1960s, The Road to the Country is the epic story of a shy, bookish student haunted by long-held guilt and shame who must go to war to free himself. Kunle's search for his brother becomes a show more journey of atonement that will see Kunle conscripted into the breakaway Biafran army and forced to fight a war he hardly understands"-- show lessTags
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In Biafra, like a world removed from the known world, one discovers new vistas of emotions, new faculties one did not know were there before. This feeling of being drained and abandoned, which comes upon Kunle so quickly that it invades his senses completely, is one such experience.
Chigozie Obioma's new novel is the story of the Nigerian Civil War told from the point of view of one young man who is caught up in the fighting. Kunle is at the university when he is told to come home -- his younger brother has left with a neighboring Igbo family to go live in Biafra. Kunle, intent on his studies, had been unaware that anything was going on and after returning home, he blithely joins a Red Cross team taking supplies into Biafra and sneaks show more off, thinking he can find his brother and they can both return with the Red Cross van the next day. But the war going on isn't a game and before Kunle gets very far, he is discovered by the Biafran army and conscripted.
What follows is a coming of age story and one that depicts the brutality and meaninglessness of war, in this case, the slow grinding down of an out-matched insurgent force, as the communities around them are also bombed and starved out. Obioma made an audacious choice in centering the novel on a central character who enters the war with no stake in it or even any knowledge. He, and the reader, soon hear stories of why his various comrades have chosen to fight, but for the most part, the reader, like Kunle, experiences the war as just a series of random events. There's a lot of repetition and a lot of waiting. It did take some effort to read the most part of this novel. Obioma pulls everything into context eventually, but like Kunle's wartime experiences, it's a slog. But as Kunle remains part of a battalion, he forms friendships and relationships, and his observations about the world around him sharpen into clearer focus. He never forgets his initial goal in sneaking into Biafra, and that gives form and meaning to his experiences. There are no doubt non-fiction accounts that provide a clearer look at that place and time, but The Road to the Country shines a light on the war's cost in human suffering. show less
Chigozie Obioma's new novel is the story of the Nigerian Civil War told from the point of view of one young man who is caught up in the fighting. Kunle is at the university when he is told to come home -- his younger brother has left with a neighboring Igbo family to go live in Biafra. Kunle, intent on his studies, had been unaware that anything was going on and after returning home, he blithely joins a Red Cross team taking supplies into Biafra and sneaks show more off, thinking he can find his brother and they can both return with the Red Cross van the next day. But the war going on isn't a game and before Kunle gets very far, he is discovered by the Biafran army and conscripted.
What follows is a coming of age story and one that depicts the brutality and meaninglessness of war, in this case, the slow grinding down of an out-matched insurgent force, as the communities around them are also bombed and starved out. Obioma made an audacious choice in centering the novel on a central character who enters the war with no stake in it or even any knowledge. He, and the reader, soon hear stories of why his various comrades have chosen to fight, but for the most part, the reader, like Kunle, experiences the war as just a series of random events. There's a lot of repetition and a lot of waiting. It did take some effort to read the most part of this novel. Obioma pulls everything into context eventually, but like Kunle's wartime experiences, it's a slog. But as Kunle remains part of a battalion, he forms friendships and relationships, and his observations about the world around him sharpen into clearer focus. He never forgets his initial goal in sneaking into Biafra, and that gives form and meaning to his experiences. There are no doubt non-fiction accounts that provide a clearer look at that place and time, but The Road to the Country shines a light on the war's cost in human suffering. show less
The headlines from the famine and civil war in BIafra and Nigeria during the 1960's may be a distant memory, but this novel brings them to front and center for today's readers.As the story opens, the main character Kunle is a law student riddled by guilt over what he perceives as his responsibility for a childhood accident. He and a friend locked his brother out of the house whereupon his brother was hit by a car and crippled for life. Now his brother is missing over the border into Biafra, part of Nigeria undergoing a civil war. Kunle is captured by the rebels and must pledge loyalty to their army to save his life. The majority of the novel depicts the war and the effect it has on Kunle, his friendships and frustrations. Meanwhile, show more occasional chapters describe an ancient seer who has envisioned Kunle's life and future from before he was born.
Warning: the brutality and terror of this civil war are portrayed graphically, making this a difficult read. However, the writing is masterful, and the themes are compelling. Man's inhumanity to man, loyalty and betrayal, fate and survival, friendship and redemption are all interwoven to make this book unforgettable.
"The world, asleep before, is now awake, teeming with earthly susurrations and voices, the machinery of life spinning on its wheels. Like a merciless stream, life will flow on, carrying in it the yowling joy of birthing, the sorrowful howling of dying. There will be laughter and tears, remembrance and forgetting, pride and shame, silence and noise." show less
Warning: the brutality and terror of this civil war are portrayed graphically, making this a difficult read. However, the writing is masterful, and the themes are compelling. Man's inhumanity to man, loyalty and betrayal, fate and survival, friendship and redemption are all interwoven to make this book unforgettable.
"The world, asleep before, is now awake, teeming with earthly susurrations and voices, the machinery of life spinning on its wheels. Like a merciless stream, life will flow on, carrying in it the yowling joy of birthing, the sorrowful howling of dying. There will be laughter and tears, remembrance and forgetting, pride and shame, silence and noise." show less
Mr. Obioma's voice is just so unique. It continues the magical realism from his first two novels and continues with the theme of people trapped by circumstances either by their misguided beliefs or just poor decision making.
I haven't read many novels set during war-time, and don't be put off if you're not into "War Novels", this isn't a war book, but the war is used more as a tool to show the horrors inflicted upon the combatants, both willing and unwilling, and the general population.
Similar themes throughout each of his books, but all of them are unique.
I haven't read many novels set during war-time, and don't be put off if you're not into "War Novels", this isn't a war book, but the war is used more as a tool to show the horrors inflicted upon the combatants, both willing and unwilling, and the general population.
Similar themes throughout each of his books, but all of them are unique.
Obioma is a brilliant writer. I have read his 3 novels and loved them all. In this book he explores many of his recurrent themes — fate, personal responsibility, guilt and atonement, loyalty, friendship and family relationships. It is also a gruesome war story and Obioma does not spare his readers from witnessing and experiencing its many horrors, atrocities, and painful consequences. Obioma weaves a mystical element throughout this tale — the Seer — which in many ways served to give me a sense of hope rather than total despair.
This is a harrowing, but highly engaging book about brotherly love amidst the war between Nigeria and the breakaway regions called Biafra that wanted independence from Nigeria. This led to the Nigerian Civil War. The war lasted from 1967 to 1970.
The Road to the Country is the story of two members of a family but also in a sense, geopolitically, about sibling rivalries and survival. One brother goes in search of another over enemy lines. Forces out of their control spin out across the novel. It has some interesting dream/hallucinatory sections.
The Road to the Country is the story of two members of a family but also in a sense, geopolitically, about sibling rivalries and survival. One brother goes in search of another over enemy lines. Forces out of their control spin out across the novel. It has some interesting dream/hallucinatory sections.
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9+ Works 2,081 Members
Chigozie Obioma is a Nigerian novelist who wrote, The Fishermen, and will be featured at the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2015 program. He made the Man Booker Prize for Fiction 2015 shortlist. He also made the shortlist for the UK¿s £10,000 (A$21,394) Guardian First Book Award. (Bowker Author Biography)
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- General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
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- 823.914 — Literature & rhetoric English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1945-1999
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- PR9387.9 .O2756 .R63 — Language and Literature English English Literature English literature: Provincial, local, etc.
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