Chinua Achebe, the author of Things Fall Apart, is a writer whose moral courage
and storytelling gifts have left an enduring stamp on world literature. There Was a
Country is his long-awaited account of coming of age during the defining experience of
his life: the Nigerian Civil War, also known as the Biafran War of 1967-1970. It became
infamous around the world for its impact on the Biafrans, who were starved to death by the
Nigerian government in one of the twentieth century's greatest humanitarian disasters.
Caught up in the atrocities were Chinua Achebe and his young family. Achebe, already a
world-renowned novelist, served his Biafran homeland as a roving cultural ambassador,
witnessing the war's full horror first-hand. Immediately after the war, he took an academic
post in the United States, and for over forty years he has maintained a considered silence
on those terrible years, addressing them only obliquely through his poetry. Now, years in
the making, comes his towering reckoning with one of modern Africa's most fateful
experiences, both as he lived it and he has now come to understand it.
Marrying history and memoir, with the author's poetry woven throughout, There Was a
Country is a distillation of vivid observation and considered research and reflection.
It relates Nigeria's birth pangs in the context of Achebe's own development as a man and a
writer, and examines the role of the artist in times of war.