CHINUA ACHEBE QUOTES III

Nigerian writer (1930-2013)

Strange
indeed how love in other
ways so particular
will pick a corner
in that charnel-house
tidy it and coil up there, perhaps
even fall asleep--her face
turned to the wall!

CHINUA ACHEBE

Attento, Soul Brother!

Tags: love


The books are, in fact, the story of the country of my birth, Ogidi, in eastern Nigeria. In the first, I tell of the village traditions and the hopes and fears of all the inhabitants at the time when the first contacts with Europeans are taking place. In the second book, which is in fact the third of the trilogy, the story is about my generation. In the missing book, the story will be about my father's generation, those who were Christianized. The theme of it will be the conflict of the head priest with the rest of the village during the 1920's. But I can't write it yet, because I haven't yet got far enough back into the problems of that period. It is too easy to discredit the former generation. In reality, that generation is very important and I must still pay attention to it.

CHINUA ACHEBE

interview, Afrique, 1962


Most writers who are beginners, if they are honest with themselves, will admit that they are praying for a readership as they begin to write. But it should be the quality of the craft, not the audience, that should be the greatest motivating factor.

CHINUA ACHEBE

There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra

Tags: writing


A debt may get mouldy, but it never decays.

CHINUA ACHEBE

No Longer at Ease

Tags: debt


Death is tolerable only when it leads again to life.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Collected Poems

Tags: death


A proud heart can survive general failure because such a failure does not prick its pride. It is more difficult and more bitter when a man fails alone.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Things Fall Apart

Tags: failure, pride


We must now turn from considering the necessary struggle with language arising, as it were, from its very nature and the nature of the society it serves to the more ominous threat to its integrity brought about neither by its innate inadequacy nor yet by the incompetence and carelessness of its ordinary users, but rather engineered deliberately by those who will manipulate words for their own ends.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays

Tags: language, words


I flung open long-disused windows
and doors and saw my hut
new-swept by rainbow broom
of sunlight become my home again
on whose trysting floor waited
my proud vibrant life.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Attento, Soul Brother!


Charity . . . is the opium of the privileged.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Anthills of the Savannah

Tags: charity


Joseph Conrad was a thoroughgoing racist. That this simple truth is glossed over in criticisms of his work is due to the fact that white racism against Africa is such a normal way of thinking that its manifestations go completely unremarked.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays

Tags: Joseph Conrad, racism


Come here into the hollow of my conscience
I will show you a thing or two
I will show you the heat of my love.
You know what?
I can give you babies too
Real leaders of tomorrow
Right here under the bridge
I can give you real leaders of thought.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays


It's so easy to get into the same routine. A novel every two years; perhaps, improving technique. But I'm not interested in that. I'm interested in doing something fundamentally important--and therefore, it needs time. And what I've been doing, really, is avoiding this pressure to get into the habit of one novel a year. This is what is expected of novelists. And I have never been really too much concerned with doing what is expected of novelists, or writers, or artists. I want to do what I believe is important.

CHINUA ACHEBE

interview, Okike, 1990

Tags: writing


The world is like a Mask dancing. If you want to see it well, you do not stand in one place.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Arrow of God

Tags: travel


The women are, of course, the biggest single group of oppressed people in the world and, if we are to believe the Book of Genesis, the very oldest.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Anthills of the Savannah

Tags: women


Americans, it seems to me, tend to protect their children from the harshness of life, in their interest. That's not the way my people rear their children. They let them experience the world as it is.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Philadelphia Inquirer, Apr. 2, 2008

Tags: children, America


The price a world language must be prepared to pay is submission to many different kinds of use.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Morning Yet on Creation Day

Tags: language


If I write novels in a country in which most citizens are illiterate, who then is my community?

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays

Tags: writing


My theory of the uses of fiction is that benificent fiction calls into full life our total range of imaginative faculties and gives us a heightened sense of our personal, social and human reality.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays

Tags: writing


But like all the other women I have referred to, she expressed herself with passionate and disarming effrontery.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays

Tags: women


The most awful thing about power is not that it corrupts absolutely but that it makes people so utterly boring, so predictable.

CHINUA ACHEBE

Anthills of the Savannah

Tags: power