
Arrows of Rain
Author: Okey Ndibe
Narrator: Peter Jay Fernandez
Unabridged: 8 hr 43 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 01/06/2015
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction

Author: Okey Ndibe
Narrator: Peter Jay Fernandez
Unabridged: 8 hr 43 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 01/06/2015
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction
Okey Ndibe,
author of the novels Arrows of Rain and Foreign Gods, Inc., teaches African literature and African diaspora literature at Brown University. He earned an MFA and PhD from the University of
Massachusetts–Amherst and has taught at Connecticut College, Bard College–Simon’s Rock, Trinity College (Connecticut), and the University of Lagos (as a Fulbright
scholar). He also served on the editorial board of the Hartford Courant, where his essays won
national and state awards.
A deeply haunting and powerful book that explores the corruption and terror still prevalent in the world today. Arrows of Rain follows a similar path of Kafka's The Trial and Camus' The Stranger, but it certainly does not sit in the shadows of those books. Rich in culture and politics, Arrows of Rai......more
Wow, I'm not even sure what to say. This is the first book I've read by a Nigerian author. I know, I should read Things Fall Apart, and I will. Okey Ndibe's writing style is different from what I normally read. He is very direct and to the point in his statements but the story itself unravels in lay......more
Another strong showing from Ndibe. Somehow less gut-wrenching than Foreign Gods Inc., but dealing with similar themes of fear and betrayal. The same healthy cynicism towards institutions is here, countered by dignified treatment of individuals, even the villains. I read this very quickly and enjoyed......more
Arrows of Rain was one of the saddest books I have ever read. Okey Ndibe brings the reader right into the story when a homeless man, Bukuru, who lives on B. Beach, hears the screams of a prostitute who has been savagely raped by many men and left for dead. After the army men get back into their truc......more
There are shattering political themes and mantras in Ndibe's first novel, that he seems to encourage himself to write with. The gift of speech is a debt we have towards truth; silence and inaction can be a cowardly betrayal of knowledge; we fear power but power fears memory. It is not a long novel,......more