Todo se desmorona

205 pages

Spanish language

Published 2015 by Debolsillo.

ISBN:
978-84-9908-269-1
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

View on Inventaire

5 stars (4 reviews)

Okonkwo es un gran guerrero, cuya fama se extiende por toda el África Occidental, pero cuando mata accidentalmente a un prohombre de su clan es obligado a expiar su culpa con el sacrificio de su hijastro y el exilio. Cuando por fin puede regresar a su aldea, la encuentra repleta de misioneros y gobernadores británicos; su mundo se desintegra, y él no puede más que precipitarse hacia la tragedia.

Publicada por vez primera en 1958, Todo se desmorona se asocia con las narraciones orales, pero también con la tragedia griega y las grandes novelas del XIX.

"La literatura africana sería impensable y estaría incompleta sin las obras de Chinua Achebe. En pasión, intelecto y prosa cristalina, no hay escritor que lo haya superado." (Toni Morrison)

8 editions

Review of 'Things Fall Apart' on 'GoodReads'

4 stars

Wow. For the first half of this book I thought it a bit artless and frustrating, but it turns into a very much cleverer and more subtle work than I had been expecting. Ultimately the book is utterly damning about colonialism without ever romanticising what came before it.



I feel weird tagging "spoilers" about a book the outlines of which are pretty well known, and the plot of which is basically described in the publisher blurb, but in spite of all that there were some surprises as I went, so here goes:



First of all, there is one thing that annoyed me intensely through the entire book: the complete lack of any development of female characters or voices. I can imagine a defence of that in terms of the book describing two intensely patriarchal cultures and their meeting, but I'm still digesting Achebe's critique of Conrad. One of his more …