Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Full Version | Audio book

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 508

  • @Fancyread
    @Fancyread  3 года назад +873

    Jump right to the appropriate chapter using the following timestamps:
    Part 1
    Ch. 1: 0:00:27
    Ch. 2: 0:13:12
    Ch. 3: 0:26:49
    Ch. 4: 0:47:04
    Ch. 5: 1:07:20
    Ch. 6: 1:26:00
    Ch. 7: 1:35:49
    Ch. 8: 1:57:35
    Ch. 9: 2:20:34
    Ch. 10: 2:44:48
    Ch. 11: 2:59:54
    Ch. 12: 3:31:08
    Ch. 13: 3:49:22
    Part 2
    Ch. 14: 4:02:08
    Ch. 15: 4:16:06
    Ch. 16: 4:29:41
    Ch. 17: 4:39:34
    Ch. 18: 4:52:16
    Ch. 19: 5:07:14
    Part 3
    Ch. 20: 5:19:01
    Ch. 21: 5:31:59
    Ch. 22: 5:42:31
    Ch. 23: 5:58:07
    Ch. 24: 6:08:44
    Ch. 25: 6:24:02

  • @drakes.3951
    @drakes.3951 Год назад +1142

    who else had to read dis for school ?

  • @K110sk
    @K110sk Год назад +602

    Currently putting this in x2 speed and reading the whole book in one night as I have a test on this tomorrow morning.

  • @obakeng1140
    @obakeng1140 4 месяца назад +57

    It's sad to see so many people listen to this because of school. I wish the education system did not ruin literary experiences for so many, to the point where works of art such as this are viewed as chores

    • @karenyates642
      @karenyates642 2 месяца назад +6

      You MUST be joking. No student would OPT to read this unless it was assigned. This story has great themes. Students learn a great deal through this experience. The issue is that students DO NOT want to actually READ the story. If they would take the time and READ the story, they would increase their comprehension, vocabulary and understanding of the author’s perspective.

    • @WeirdoFries
      @WeirdoFries Месяц назад

      For real 😕

  • @wycliffepoet5201
    @wycliffepoet5201 2 месяца назад +3

    Greatest book to have ever been written. I am here over ans over again because I love the book. Not because of shitty tests and exams

  • @MellonAM
    @MellonAM 9 месяцев назад +30

    I've had 2 months to read it, the test was weeks ago, the semester ends this week, this video has come in clutch

  • @bobbycisek5534
    @bobbycisek5534 2 года назад +624

    Bro 6 hours I am not finishing this book tonight 💀

    • @angelaleaa480
      @angelaleaa480 2 года назад +97

      Put that jawn in 2x speed whaa

    • @808_bunni2
      @808_bunni2 2 года назад +68

      nah fr.. i shouldve read it when i was supposed 2😭

    • @drizzybaby5544
      @drizzybaby5544 2 года назад +3

      That really turned me off 😭😭

    • @brookem1422
      @brookem1422 Год назад +3

      @@angelaleaa480 THATS WHAT I DID LMAO

    • @asquirrel2320
      @asquirrel2320 Год назад +5

      Felt, I should have just read like I was supposed to... but yolo

  • @declancollins5082
    @declancollins5082 2 года назад +250

    I don’t like to read and this just saved my life. ( I like destroy lonely). I was forced to read this book for class.

  • @coulsonkunz3579
    @coulsonkunz3579 11 месяцев назад +81

    Here I go listening to this in the morning before my test on the book this afternoon. I’ve had all semester to read it and I haven’t even opened the book 😂

    • @Fancyread
      @Fancyread  11 месяцев назад +6

      😂😂

    • @MellonAM
      @MellonAM 9 месяцев назад +2

      I've had 2 months to read it, the test was weeks ago, the semester ends this week, this video has come in clutch

    • @hadiyahsham4168
      @hadiyahsham4168 9 месяцев назад +1

      Same

    • @will0_p
      @will0_p 8 месяцев назад +1

      Y’all are cooked 😭

    • @hosai896
      @hosai896 6 месяцев назад +1

      Guys I had less than 3 weeks to read it and I finished in a week it was such a sad book 😭

  • @darkotaku2036
    @darkotaku2036 2 года назад +116

    Thank God for 2x speed or I would be screwed

  • @Andrea-dq4cg
    @Andrea-dq4cg 4 месяца назад +10

    CHAPTER 1 - 0:30
    CHAPTER 2 - 13:09
    CHAPTER 3 - 26:49
    CHAPTER 4 - 47:04
    CHAPTER 5 - 1:07:18
    CHAPTER 6 - 1:25:59
    CHAPTER 7 - 1:35:46
    CHAPTER 8 - 1:57:36
    CHAPTER 9 - 2:20:32
    CHAPTER 10 - 2:44:47
    CHAPTER 11 - 2:59:53
    CHAPTER 12 - 3:31:07
    CHAPTER 13 - 3:49:24
    CHAPTER 14 - 4:02:14
    CHAPTER 15 - 4:16:05
    CHAPTER 16 - 4:29:41
    CHAPTER 17 - 4:39:32
    CHAPTER 18 - 4:52:17
    CHAPTER 19 - 5:07:12
    CHAPTER 20 - 5:18:59
    CHAPTER 21 - 5:31:59
    CHAPTER 22 - 5:42:30
    CHAPTER 23 - 5:58:05
    CHAPTER 24 - 6:08:43
    CHAPTER 25 - 6:24:01

  • @KingSlimjeezy
    @KingSlimjeezy 6 месяцев назад +4

    to all you test kiddies have it known I am here because I like this book

  • @tinyawaru5031
    @tinyawaru5031 Год назад +44

    The proverbs in the book are all so beautifully enriching. Truly enlightening our rich and beautiful African heritage.

  • @FallenSkater1940
    @FallenSkater1940 Год назад +62

    As a person with native American ancestry, I can see many parallels between these events of colonization. It's a great shame how much of our history has been lost due to conquest.

    • @sdfjsd
      @sdfjsd Год назад +5

      The same exact thing happened to India.

    • @omggiiirl2077
      @omggiiirl2077 2 месяца назад +2

      Yeah i'm of both Igbo and indigenous American ancestry of Muscogee creek afiliation and i've noticed it as well. Learning about Odinani encouraged me to drop christianity and adopt igbo religion. There are many parallels. Theres also a lot of parallels with Korean and Hawaiian indigenous beliefs, yeah i'm mixed with those too. It makes me crazy😂😂😂😂

    • @nihilex5838
      @nihilex5838 День назад

      Then you have missed the whole point. :) 'History' exists only in societies that have attained the historical perception of things, which has a number of minimal pre-requisites that would normally include developed urban culture and a lasting tradition of producing, keeping and repdoruding texts. Neither of which is the case for rural agricultural communities or societies of hunter-gatherers. The very concept of 'history' is alien to such people (as oral tradition with myths and concepts of eternal cyclical changes prevail there).
      "Colonizers bad" kneejerk reactions prevent "modern audience" from seeing the irony that colonization was the very thing that enabled huge masses of people to rationally reflect upon being subject to it, along with a range of many other things, thanks to the spread of literacy and classical European education and knowledge. Do we need to tell how literacy rates changed before and after the colonization?
      The author of the book was a son of a teacher (!) and a missionary (!) and went to a public Christian school. Now try to honestly answer to yourself if this book could exist (and, hence, if you could read it and learn about the local culture and society) but for these very colonial aspects of the author's background :)
      So did "colonization" truly 'lost' the history or manifested it eventually?

    • @nihilex5838
      @nihilex5838 День назад

      @@sdfjsd dude, most of the world would not know a thing about Indian history and culture but for Brits who did massive research on those in XVIII and XIX centuries, basically inventing the whole concept of "India" as we know it, putting a bunch of assorted religious and philosophical systems, and historical episodes into a single system. :) Also having translated tons of original texts into European languages so they would be incorporated into a broader cultural context. (like Schopenhauer philosophy inspired by Buddhism)

  • @sypherdragon6134
    @sypherdragon6134 2 года назад +177

    The best part is at 6:30:40

    • @nathvaelll
      @nathvaelll 2 года назад +9

      Ong

    • @princemafia5550
      @princemafia5550 Год назад +7

      Bro what? You lack a passion for reading. My guess is that you got a phone at the age of 10 or younger. Hehe i got a phone at the age of fifteen, so i had five more years to develop my love of reading. Honestly, technology ruins the fun of patient and classic enterprises like reading

    • @lyrablack8621
      @lyrablack8621 Год назад +10

      @@princemafia5550 Disagree, i think i got my phone at 12-13, and technology enhances it! Instead of scrolling on tiktok etc i can reread _The Last Unicorn_ on the internet archive over and over again ☺️. And i love audiobooks, sometimes i have trouble paying attention; but i reread _Sula_ by Toni Morrison over and over without an audiobook (I've got the physical book too but i love quoting things, and i can just screenshot it from my phone)
      Edit: formatting

    • @indieoregano
      @indieoregano Год назад +16

      @@princemafia5550 that's a lot of assumptions made about someone you don't know anything about. I love reading, but this book is full of sexism and abuse, so I personally don't enjoy it. Check yourself.

    • @shutup2094
      @shutup2094 Год назад +4

      @@princemafia5550 you’re probably just angry that you didn’t get a phone earlier L

  • @noelfakude7081
    @noelfakude7081 Год назад +16

    I taught this novel in my first year as a teacher in a neighbouring country to my own- South Africa. Dincf. Ironically my students knew about the author and this book.
    Since then I have taught this book six times during my forty years of teaching.

  • @spectacularkidshow770
    @spectacularkidshow770 Год назад +43

    I had to read this book for school, but this audiobook is great the narrator does a really good job :)

  • @mostlyoldschool
    @mostlyoldschool 6 месяцев назад +1

    I first read it for the literature class more than 20 years ago, I have now listened to the audiobook and I must say my perspective has a whole new deeper understanding

  • @jameskowanko7574
    @jameskowanko7574 2 года назад +42

    25:40 - Okonkwo is rude to his wife. I couldn't buy a physical copy at the college campus book store, so I'm saving the quotes here for the paper I have to write for my African history class

    • @horatiomiller7386
      @horatiomiller7386 Год назад +1

      Dude beats his wife Fuck Okonkwo

    • @Gaurav_Rathi
      @Gaurav_Rathi Год назад +3

      This book is fiction. It even states on the book's cover. I don't understand why they are teaching this to you in History class.
      Also, college?!?!!, college??!!. We are doing this in 8th grade for English (Analytical Writing).

    • @jameskowanko7574
      @jameskowanko7574 Год назад +5

      @@Gaurav_Rathi The way my professor explained it, he wanted us to have a personal connection and understanding of what the events we were learning about were like for everyday people.
      I also had to read another Chinua Achebe novel ‘a man of the people’

    • @farajbeden7786
      @farajbeden7786 7 месяцев назад +1

      I thought you would be concerned about the ill-fated boy Ikemefuna. I struggle to read that part! How far such stories remind me of the cruelty of life back then, especially to the unfortunate ones among them. Can you imagine that these horrible things did happen in real life too? I can't be grateful enough to be living in the 21st century!

  • @georgekabwela8437
    @georgekabwela8437 10 месяцев назад +3

    I read this book in 1973. Was used in secondary schools in Zambia mainly in literature. Formed part of deeply understanding issues conveyed in our second language english.

  • @NatalleeK
    @NatalleeK Год назад +42

    Really wish something actually happened in the first three quarters of the book

    • @judgegrinch1139
      @judgegrinch1139 Год назад +13

      Did you even read the book or what? The first three quarters is the better parts in my opinion it shows all the flaws and positives of the characters and the village, you have to have that to understand how it falls apart

    • @Bandit.fortnite
      @Bandit.fortnite 9 месяцев назад

      @@judgegrinch1139🤓

    • @wycliffepoet5201
      @wycliffepoet5201 2 месяца назад +1

      Write your own book

  • @LanceRulau
    @LanceRulau Год назад +6

    Peter Francis James is such a strong narrator. I've listened to him narrate Richard Wright, and he does great justice for Achebe. Thank you for the upload. Cheers!

  • @Guardie-M
    @Guardie-M Год назад +5

    This is one of the most loved Nigeria book in Zimbabwe it was a must to read

  • @appleseed06
    @appleseed06 Год назад +82

    This definitely helped me out a lot. Thanks for uploading this audio book.

  • @MeepBeepBeep
    @MeepBeepBeep Год назад +20

    How did almost every single character manage to annoy me. Some of them were literally fighting each other but I was still against both sides.

    • @TheJayTex
      @TheJayTex Год назад +10

      That’s the point. It’s supposed to illustrate the problems in both cultures and that both were not perfect by any means

  • @subhorouth8844
    @subhorouth8844 2 года назад +24

    Thank you so much for putting it here.

  • @alicehanna4118
    @alicehanna4118 2 года назад +57

    just saved me for my english exam thankyou!

  • @swagatachatterjee3489
    @swagatachatterjee3489 4 месяца назад +2

    11:11 The sun shines on those who stand before those who kneel under it.
    12:38 If a Child washes his hands he could eat with kings.
    15:20 When the moon is shining the cripple becomes hungry for a walk.
    34:18 A man who pays respect to the great paves the way to his own greatness.

  • @TGMLM6002Studios
    @TGMLM6002Studios Год назад +7

    This is gonna save my life cause I gotta read this for school and I suck at reading

    • @karioton
      @karioton 14 дней назад

      why are you verified

  • @charlieb1834
    @charlieb1834 Год назад +6

    Thank you for the great audiobook!

  • @mosestekper7659
    @mosestekper7659 Год назад +12

    Nothing can replace having a hard book in your hands.

  • @Tomie.shop8
    @Tomie.shop8 Месяц назад

    I'm going to loop it and put it on 2x while I sleep 😊

  • @meseeks7188
    @meseeks7188 Год назад +12

    Who’s reading this for school

  • @nwadi6408
    @nwadi6408 6 месяцев назад

    One of the greatest novels ever.

  • @ink2653
    @ink2653 Год назад +8

    "why should a man suffer so aggregiously for a crime he commited inadvertently?", ch 13
    4:13:37
    "there is something omi ous behind yhr silence" after uchendu says 'never kill anything thatbsays nothing
    5:30:23

  • @alykas1512
    @alykas1512 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much! This recording helped me so much.

  • @emmyb4743
    @emmyb4743 Год назад +5

    the ending of this book is shocking and painful

  • @kazuyolangston
    @kazuyolangston Год назад +11

    i had to put is on 1.75x speed bc they read slow

  • @zandergarrity5946
    @zandergarrity5946 Год назад +32

    Test fail bouta go crazy

  • @Leeasiimwe
    @Leeasiimwe Год назад +4

    Bravo 👏 for sure things fall apart in the blink of an eye 👀

  • @rachelprout
    @rachelprout Год назад +3

    As a white person I found the book interesting. The explanations of tribal life were enlightening, and even though I found some of the customs hard to listen to iam not convinced that the arrival of Christianity and white man's colonisation and so called civilization made things
    better.

    • @emmanuelchux9242
      @emmanuelchux9242 5 месяцев назад

      Actually it didn't. There was no prison. Communal living.

  • @triaachafia1657
    @triaachafia1657 Год назад +1

    Thank you
    U saved my life

  • @Dan13Speed
    @Dan13Speed 7 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic!!

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +3

    4:38:46 something felt in the marrow (to nuoye)
    4:39:12 hymn poured into his parched soul

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +2

    4:20:56 the white man arrives to the clan
    Albino
    He sipped his wine
    And he was riding an iron horse
    The elders consulted their oracle
    Break their clan and spread destruction among them
    The oracle said
    Other white men where on their way
    Locusts

  • @bafanashabangu9725
    @bafanashabangu9725 2 года назад +20

    I feel sad after listening, why did they even come here 😒

    • @Free-SpokenMedia
      @Free-SpokenMedia 2 года назад

      Africa is much better off now. Before Europeans arrived, it was far more primitive and superstitious, with human sacrifices, slavery, and disease running rampant.

    • @subhorouth8844
      @subhorouth8844 2 года назад +3

      That is what their religion (Christianity) taught them to do.

    • @celestialceilagor3802
      @celestialceilagor3802 Год назад

      Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money i like Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money Money money i like money! Ah-AGHGHAHAAAAAH!

  • @terencelawrence6180
    @terencelawrence6180 3 месяца назад

    thank your very much for this

  • @PittGrad2017
    @PittGrad2017 Год назад +6

    I had a copy and lost it moving! 😭

  • @sdfjsd
    @sdfjsd Год назад +3

    My school is very dumb. We did not read this book in my AP English Language class or my English 2 class. We did, however, read Siddhartha, which was the cringiest book I have ever read. To me, reading Siddhartha felt sticking my head in a basket full of dirty toenails. It was too hippie-ish.
    I am surprised that my school decided to read Siddhartha instead of this book because the Siddhartha book does not accurately describe Hindu philosophy. To many Hindus, the Siddhartha book is a joke.

    • @sdfjsd
      @sdfjsd Год назад

      Siddhartha is a shallow book full of… hippie nonsense. There’s no depth in that book. So, my dumb school, why don’t you choose a better classic, such as Things Fall Apart, instead of Siddartha! Siddartha should not even be a classic because it is full of stereotypes. A Skinny Sanama? Then you ridicule Buddha’s teachings? Show some respect.

  • @colleen9493
    @colleen9493 2 года назад +15

    Why are half the comments timestamps

    • @shawnhurst5890
      @shawnhurst5890 2 года назад +11

      People are saving their spots in their book

    • @colleen9493
      @colleen9493 2 года назад

      @@shawnhurst5890 ohh okay

  • @minmax5
    @minmax5 Год назад +2

    Beautiful and devastating.

  • @testsubjection
    @testsubjection 10 месяцев назад +1

    3:46:00
    I love audiobooks

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 2 года назад +22

    4:10:29 Uchendu's rebuke to Okonkwo "Mother is Supreme"

    • @jackishot45
      @jackishot45 2 года назад +2

      lmao read this by accident right as that was happening

  • @tupacshakur2168
    @tupacshakur2168 Год назад +3

    DAMN YOU MS GRINSELL

  • @l8nu
    @l8nu 11 месяцев назад

    listening to this while we take the test wish me luck

  • @mizu0340
    @mizu0340 Год назад +1

    i watching this to fall asleep on the bus

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +3

    4:23:13 three white men came to the clan
    4:23:50 three white men and followers surrounded the market
    Began to shoot
    Except those whose chi were wide awake
    A great evil had come upon their land
    4:24:47
    4:25:06 the story mother kite / duckling
    4:26:27 white men / powerful guns
    4:26:45 the world has no end
    We have albinos among us

  • @ordinary..1
    @ordinary..1 3 года назад +7

    Better to upload book lines

  • @btarg1
    @btarg1 Год назад +1

    This narration is painfully slow and poor quality. I really recommend playing on 1.25x speed!

  • @thehappylife3162
    @thehappylife3162 5 месяцев назад +3

    NAME A WORSE BOOK. I will wait, this book is by far the worst we've been forced to read at school
    Thank god for the audiobook and x 2.50 speed

    • @Artobriga02
      @Artobriga02 5 месяцев назад +1

      One, No One and One Hundred Thousand - Pirandello and The Kreutzer Sonata - Tolstoj come to mind immediately.
      This is actually a very interesting book imo. It's an interesting description of a colture that has been partially wiped by European colonizers. The main character is not good and the colture is distant from ours, but that's the cool part.
      But I also get why many don't like it. The main character is quite unlikable and, for the most part, it's just the description of a colture with some plot in between.

  • @A_Bluemoon
    @A_Bluemoon Год назад +1

    2:44:48 bookmark: August 30th

  • @duncan7226
    @duncan7226 Год назад +3

    English gcses tmr and I still haven't read the book

    • @windaygo9450
      @windaygo9450 Год назад

      Tell me your results when you get them 💀🙏

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 Год назад +1

    3:20:25 "The priestess' voice..." (Ch 11 p 104)

  • @Sleepypeaxh
    @Sleepypeaxh Год назад +1

    i have a test on this at like 8 am it’s 6:11 rn and i have to listen to chapter 8 i’m on chapter 4 i hope i make it LMFAOOOO

  • @charlesgore5827
    @charlesgore5827 Год назад +6

    Mmmm, an interesting insight into the forced relationship between the British and the African. What is it about the European why he could not leave the African to his own devices ?

    • @Cadesworth
      @Cadesworth Год назад

      Because they wanted to expand for the same of colonization

    • @judgegrinch1139
      @judgegrinch1139 Год назад

      Because there are resources to steal it’s the story of humanity

  • @JieunKim-c9n
    @JieunKim-c9n Год назад +1

    1.
    improvident : 즉흥적인
    recline : ~에 기대다
    lad : 소년
    (Okonkwo, his father Unoka, Ikemefuna whom Okonkwo had to take care of)
    2.
    amiss : 어긋난, 잘못된
    discern : 분별하다
    imperious emissary : 권위있는 사절
    (Ikemefuna from Mbaino came to Okonkwo, Okonkwo had bad temper, his son Nwoye)
    3.
    consult : 찾다
    oracle : 신탁
    (after Unoka's death, Okonkwo went to Nwakibie to get seed yams, severe sharecropping years)

  • @Ind1go_Cloud
    @Ind1go_Cloud Месяц назад +1

    Yo why is my college level history class making me read a fictional story???? The research paper prompt doesnt event fit its intentionally made to force this work into what would otherwise use non fiction sources exclusively? Like who cites a fictional story when discussing history that makes no sense.

    • @ilyassbouioitlan7701
      @ilyassbouioitlan7701 11 дней назад

      I am sorry but you really have to get out this anger out of you, finish your research project, and then reread this or listen to understand why!

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 Год назад

    3:18:35 "There were no stars in the sky..." (Ch 11 p 104)

  • @bora5980
    @bora5980 5 месяцев назад

    I’ve been laughing my ass off while reading the comments. Good luck guys

  • @joebanson148
    @joebanson148 2 года назад +3

    Superbly strong.... Forever!

  • @teddyholthaus7618
    @teddyholthaus7618 8 месяцев назад

    Personal Bookmark - 00:39:00

  • @shareeesegraham546
    @shareeesegraham546 Год назад +4

    Chapter 3 26:51

  • @lukwagonicholas1305
    @lukwagonicholas1305 9 месяцев назад +1

    Whenever you see a toad jumping in broad day light...

  • @timeparticles
    @timeparticles Месяц назад +1

    I feel like eating some yams, now...?

  • @Feelsonwheels04
    @Feelsonwheels04 8 месяцев назад

    6:06:53 skip back for full quote

  • @hold_me_close
    @hold_me_close 2 года назад +18

    what a great tragedy

  • @alhajijawara340
    @alhajijawara340 Год назад +1

    The story is dramatically ironic

  • @parvselot_18
    @parvselot_18 2 месяца назад +3

    why is it shitty books like these we are forced to read bruh

    • @JoshuaWhitie
      @JoshuaWhitie 2 месяца назад

      Stfu it isn’t niga

    • @JoshuaWhitie
      @JoshuaWhitie 2 месяца назад

      This why got no friends niga

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад

    6:06:18 full moon
    The voice of children was not heard , no moon play
    Umuofia : startled animal sniffing the silent ominous air

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 2 года назад +2

    1:53:13 the song

  • @AnnaAkatsa
    @AnnaAkatsa 10 месяцев назад

    very usefu

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад

    4:30:12 strange faith wouldn’t last
    Afulafu worthless, empty man
    The excrement of the clan
    4:31:06 nwoye among the missionaries

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +1

    4:50:54 flaming fire

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +1

    5:45:06 as a man danced so the drums were
    Beating for him
    Mr smith danced

  • @checatrading3325
    @checatrading3325 6 месяцев назад +1

    No one is talking about Okonko

  • @love4dumptruckz
    @love4dumptruckz Год назад +3

    y’all it sound goofy in 2x

    • @jocelyn248
      @jocelyn248 Месяц назад

      You get used to it after many instances of procrastinating on a book till the last second possible

  • @lenny_skywalker
    @lenny_skywalker 2 года назад +1

    Bookmark 1:38:29

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 Год назад

    3:26:08 "At last they turned..." (Ch 11 p 107)

  • @omggiiirl2077
    @omggiiirl2077 2 месяца назад

    I really wish that the igbo words for certain things were used like instead of kola nut, put kola nut in parenthesis or put a star behind the word Oji the first time and after just put the word oji. I stead of putting all rhese foreign words that seem to throw the story off. Instead chalk, use unzu. Because for those eho actually practice odinani, you can't just use any old chalk, it must be natural African chalk for spiritual purposes preferably unzu igbo. It's little stuff like that, that makes the difference.

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад +1

    5:42:50 he saw things as black and white
    And black was evil
    Sons of darkness

  • @meeraow1286
    @meeraow1286 Год назад

    4:33:14 all sons of god
    New god, creator of all men and women
    He told them the true god lived on high
    4:35:44 gods of deceit who tell you to kill your fellows

  • @liverenjoyer
    @liverenjoyer Месяц назад

    X2 SPEEDRUN LETSGOO

  • @zannyzoop5641
    @zannyzoop5641 7 месяцев назад +2

    6 hours💀 im cooked

  • @Oh_Nana1990
    @Oh_Nana1990 10 месяцев назад

    Oh hell! Please where can I find an actual African reading this book ? Because I cannot bear the mispronunciations of the names and terms.

  • @oshawott_gaming1830
    @oshawott_gaming1830 Год назад +1

    Hey steele knights

  • @heatherdavis2657
    @heatherdavis2657 Год назад

    5:16:37 Old Man to Okonkwo in Mbanta

  • @samlumpkin8098
    @samlumpkin8098 9 месяцев назад

    Chapter five🙏🙏🙏

  • @tequila.alexis
    @tequila.alexis Год назад

    1:26:00 bookmark

  • @stuffyboii1297
    @stuffyboii1297 Месяц назад

    had listen to this for 5 hours straight i want to die

  • @sihlehlabangwane8499
    @sihlehlabangwane8499 7 месяцев назад

    Please source there was a country: a personal history of biafra