Americanah

Paperback, 588 pages

English language

Published March 4, 2014 by Anchor Books.

ISBN:
978-0-307-45592-5
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OCLC Number:
885396592

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4 stars (17 reviews)

Ifemelu and Obinze are young and in love when they depart military-ruled Nigeria for the West. Beautiful, self-assured Ifemelu heads for America, where despite her academic success she is forced to grapple with what it means to be black for the first time. Quiet, thoughtful Obinze had hoped to join her, but with post—9/11 America closed to him, he instead plunges into a danger- ous, undocumented life in London. At once powerful and tender, Americanah is a remarkable novel of race, love, and identity by the award-winning writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichte. --back cover

8 editions

Den eviga kärleken?

4 stars

Förre året läste jag två av Adichies andra böcker, 'En halv gul sol' och 'Lila hibiskus'. Det är en författare som min sambo tycker mycket om och som kändes annorlunda än det jag brukar läsa.

I likhet med 'En halv gul sol' är boken ganska tjock, och utspelar sig över många år. Gissningsvis är huvudkaraktärena i 13-14 årsåldern när boken börjar och närmer sig 40 när boken slutar. Medans 'En halv gul sol' sträcker sig över Biafrakriget, utspelar sig 'Americanah' i en värld där det finns mobiltelefoner och bloggar.

Vad handlar den om? Vad ger den en inblick i? En ung generation nigerianer på nittiotalet som mest vill resa ut och bosätta sig i USA eller England. Att emigrera, bosätta sig utomlands, försöka att överleva i ett nytt land splittrad från familj och nära vänner. Att utomlands upptäcka att man är mörkhyad, men inte en "svart amerikan." Att flytta hem, …

Un très bon roman qui fait plonger dans la question des racines et de l'identité

5 stars

J'ai beaucoup aimé Americanah. L'héroïne Ifemelu, quitte le Nigeria pour aller étudier aux États-Unis et se retrouve confronté à la question de son identité entre étudiante états-unienne et nigériane, aux questions de race et de racisme entre les deux continents, mais également à la distance avec sa famille, aux histoires d'amours et relations quand on vit à l'étranger. C'est beau, très bien écrit, et très fin.

Strong Undercurrents

3 stars

Americanah sets out to do what so much great literature does: tell a great human story with an undercurrent of theory. In this, it is the story of young love in Nigeria separated by emigration of the two protagonists: Ifemelu to America and Obinze to England. They experience the dissonance of being non-nationals and racially other in two contexts while also learning to live and becoming themselves.

Only that doesn't really happen. In both stories, the protagonists are like blank canvases surrounded by caricatures of people who are actually alive but are slightly unbelievable. Our heroes observe those around them and summarise their traits as if human beings all present their entire personalities in one quick gesture or comment. The story is interspersed with blog posts written by Ifemelu that feel like the writing of Ta-Nahesi Coates – sharp, witty and unashamedly Black. The undercurrent of theory thus bubbles up …

Review of 'Americanah' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book was... I don't know how to capture it. It's more social commentary than a novel. And a lot of the commentary is spot-on, but as a novel, the book seems very disjointed.

Maybe because I'm reading it in 2017, the race-in-America commentary didn't have much of an effect on me - the Non-American Black distinctions were interesting though. What I did like quite a bit was post-colonial Lagos of their childhood, and the drudgery of choicelessness. How they long to move away and make something of themselves. The immigrant anxieties resonated well with me - possibly because these are questions that are on my mind currently.

Ifemelu is a sharp observer of the world around her, but for the life of me I couldn't figure out her own motivations, what drove her in life, her decisions, her flights of fancy. Her character suffered from being straitjacketed to fit …

Review of 'Americanah' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

After really enjoying Purple Hibiscus, and listening to an NPR interview with Adichie, I really looked forward to reading this book. Sadly, it's just not good. The characters are cold and distant, with each other and with the reader. The plot is too simple for a book this big. I kept wishing to push things forward. The decision to include blog posts by the main character has some appeal, but the posts themselves aren't particularly thought-provoking or insightful. The bones of a good book are here, but the actual story is slow and boring.

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