Wes Africa's prominent author Chinua Achebe is recognized worldwide for its excellent intelligent usage of literary facilities and raises questions about the African continent, especially Nigeria. He introduced the hero's Obi · Okonkou to the world; through his eyes he was able to see the world of Nigeria. In "collapse of things", after his arrival from the UK, Okonkwo, the first of his three novels, was completely separated from his African tradition.
Chinua Achebe (1960) is not so easy, but is a sequel to Things Fall Apart. It leads the reader to progress in the life of Okonkwo descendants. The novel focuses on Obi Okonkwo, but its failure is due to his inability to handle the wartime culture's confrontation value system and his English training. In the late 1950s, it was no longer easy. Chinua Achebe (1964) "Arrow of God" occurs between "not tolerance any more" and "to break up things". This is the story of Father Ivo who responds to change by compromising his values and tradition. He sent his son to a ministry school and testified to his people in a land dispute. The result is the conversion of warts from priest of wart to mission church religion. Achebe also shows how the African tradition has lost European culture.
Domestic and foreign treasures - Chinua Achebe produces jewels like "Autumn Separation", "No More Tolerance", "God's Arrow". Despises of the people of the Ibo people in the eastern part of Nigeria - they are the only ones that can consistently oppose the greedy invasion of their middle class missionaries. The main characters of Akebe shared the problem of adapting the British influence to the consequences of colonial era and later life. A vivid search for the curse of the local tendency and the inevitable confrontation between the West and traditional values - a tribute to how the tribal ancestors suffered - to maintain our original dignity