New York Times
Chigozie Obioma truly is the heir to Chinua Achebe.”
Vogue Megan O'Grady
Folklore-infused.
BookPage
[A] striking debut.
The Week
An evocative fable-like tale.
Travel & Leisure Caroline Hallemann
Grips readers from the very first chapter.
(Starred Review) Publishers Weekly
Seamlessly interweaving the everyday and the elemental, Obioma's strange, imaginative debut probes the nature of belief and the power of family bonds.... Obioma excels at juxtaposing sharp observation, rich images of the natural world, and motifs from biblical and tribal lore; his novel succeeds as a convincing modern narrative and as a majestic reimagining of timeless folklore.
NPR Michael Schaub
Engrossing.... [Obioma's] language is rich and hypnotic, and nearly every page is filled with an unexpected and perfectly rendered description.... This is a dark and beautiful book by a writer with seemingly endless promise.
Financial Times
The tale has a timeless quality that renders it almost allegorical, and it is the more powerful for it…A striking, controlled, and masterfully taut debut.”
author of Maps and Hiding in Plain Sight Nuruddin Farah
I find the author Chigozie Obioma formidably articulate and with great talent. I believe that he has it in him to become one of the best writers of the upcoming crop of young African authors.
Fiametta Rocco
This year's most promising African newcomer may well prove to be Chigozie Obioma.... In his exploration of the mysterious and the murderous, of the terrors that can take hold of the human mind, of the colors of life in Africa, with its vibrant fabrics and its trees laden with fruit, and most of all in his ability to create dramatic tension in this most human of African stories, Chigozie Obioma truly is the heir to Chinua Achebe.
author of The Welsh Girl Peter Ho Davies
Obioma's remarkable fiction is at once urgently, vividly immediate, yet simultaneously charged with the elemental power of myth.
USA Today (3/4 stars) Kevin Nance
[A] darkly mythic first novel [that] feels as if it might predate modernity itself.... It's hard to know where Obioma...can go with his literary career after this pitiless, unstinting start.... Perhaps he will become a kind of African Cormac McCarthy, committed to a stark vision of life in which our pretensions to civilization are forever held up and exposed as skin deep: that what really runs us is deeper down, in the blood.
USA Today
"[A] darkly mythic first novel [that] feels as if it might predate modernity itself.”
author of Before Irini Spanidou
Chigozie Obioma's gift and the authenticity of his voice are immediately apparent. What makes the narrative of THE FISHERMEN so striking and seductive is that it broaches magic realism yet stays entirely, and convincingly, in the realm of real life. Magic believed in is stark reality. One finds oneself in full suspension of disbelief that old legends and myths persist in perpetual reincarnation in present-day lives so that every character, scenes, and imagery jump off the page, firmly to lodge in the reader's mind.
The Economist
Part Bildungsroman, part Greek tragedy, THE FISHERMEN may be the most interesting debut novel to emerge from Nigeria this year.... In a first novel full of deceptive simplicity, lyrical language and playful Igbo mythology and humour, [Obioma] uses the madman's apocalyptic vision for the family as a way of conjuring up Nigeria's senseless body politic. Even a child can tell that this is no way to run a country. And yet for Benjamin, a narrator caught up in tragedy, there is also redemption. This is an impressive and beautifully imagined work.
Times Literary Supplement Stuart Kelly
THE FISHERMEN establishes Obioma as a writer to be taken seriously.... Ingenious, subtle, ambitious and intriguing.
author of The Luminaries (Man Booker Prize) Eleanor Catton
Awesome in the true sense of the word: crackling with life, freighted with death, vertiginous both in its style and in the elemental power of its story. Few novels deserve to be called 'mythic,' but Chigozie Obioma's THE FISHERMEN is certainly one of them. A truly magnificent debut.
Chicago Tribune
The most frustrating thing about The Fishermen is that the author has no other books for the reader to devour once the final page is reached.”
The Millions Claire Cameron
Should I call Obioma the next Bulawayo? Adichie or Achebe? He could be called all of these things, but THE FISHERMEN is also none of these things. It is a novel that is all its own.... [That] remind[s] me of why I love reading: to be shown what it might be like inside another culture; to slip between someone else's ears; to feel a life that I won't get to live.
Wall Street Journal
The Fishermen can be read as an allegory of the civic disarray in Nigeria under military rule. But it’s also rich with ancient themes of filial love, fratricide, vengeance and fate. Its lessons may be slippery, but its power is unmistakable.”
New Criterion Christine Emba
This strange, imaginative debut probes the nature of belief and the power of family bonds.
Guardian Helon Habila
This promising debut spins a simple, almost mythological conceit into a heartbreaking elegy to Nigeria's lost promise.
author of Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfu Alexandra Fuller
Obioma writes with gorgeous restraint reminiscent of the intricate prose in a Tolstoy novella. Every sentence delivers a precise and heartfelt blow. Hardly anyone writing today is delivering this level of intricacy, lyricism and control. Add to that, the urgency and importance of his message. It just doesn't get better than this. Get used to the name: Obioma is here to stay.
Independent Lucy Scholes
A strikingly accomplished debut, hailing Chigozie Obioma as a bold new voice in Nigerian fiction.
Christian Science Monitor Kathrine A. Powers
Arresting.... Obioma brings terrific authorial dexterity to the family's story and its small place in Nigeria, and evokes a worldview which brings with it a terrible tragedy. This is the best novel I have read so far this year, and that, I can assure you, is saying plenty.
Wall Street Journal "Best Books of 2015"
Entrancing.... Its rising tension and poetic grace make this one of the finest novels to come from Africa in years.
Chicago Tribune Trine Tsouderos
The most frustrating thing about THE FISHERMEN is that the author has no other books for the reader to devour once the final page is reached.
New Yorker
Frank and lyrical.”
Coastal Living
[A] deeply imaginative, stirring debut novel.... For those interested in a gripping, at times nail-biting, read, give this new author a try.
NPR'sBest Books of 2015 Ofeibea Quist-Arcton
Inspired by his native Nigeria and, by extension, the contradictions and marvels of Africa, Obioma is an articulate and sometimes lyrical storyteller.... A dynamic new voice from Africaand one that deserves a listen.
Kirkus Reviews
The talented Obioma exhibits a richly nuanced understanding of culture and character.... A powerful, haunting tale of grief, healing, and sibling loyalty.
Library Journal Barbara Hoffert
Elegantly near-mythic.... Made vivid by the well-rendered specifics, Obioma's quietly unfolding story of family tragedy gathers strength as its cycle of violence spins faster and faster.
AudioFile
Chukwudi Iwuji captures Nigerian speech in slightly accented English. This gives the narrative an authentic sound—as if the listener is hearing the recollections of a friend’s past instead of a novel. The story moves forward steadily with Iwuji’s consistent pace. He dramatizes many of the older characters with a theatrical quality distinguished by pauses and louder volume. The listener is especially drawn to the playful perspectives of boys nearing the end of their innocence.”
Vol. 1 Brooklyn
Unforgettable.... There is something almost mystical about Obioma's writing as well as his story, and it makes this book nearly impossible to put down.
Editors' Choice New York Times Book Review
In its exploration of the murderous and the mysterious, the mind's terrors and a vibrant Africa, this debut novel is heir to Chinua Achebe.
Economist
May be the most interesting debut novel to emerge from Nigeria this year… full of deceptive simplicity, lyrical language, and playful Igbo mythology and humor … an impressive and beautifully imagined work.”
NPR
Rich and hypnotic, nearly every page is filled with an unexpected and perfectly rendered description…a dark and beautiful book by a writer with seemingly endless promise.”
From the Publisher
Longlisted for the 2015 Etisalat Prize for Literature
Named a Best Book of the Year on more than a dozen lists, including the New York Times Book Review, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and NPR
Kirkus Reviews
2015-02-17
Life changes dramatically for Benjamin, the fourth of six children, when his father, Eme, is transferred to the town of Yola by his employer, leaving his mother to raise him and his siblings back home in Akure, Nigeria in the 1990s.Adrift without their father's presence, Benjamin and his elder brothers, Ikenna, Boja, and Obembe, find a sense of purpose in fishing at Omi-Ala, the local river, where they have been forbidden to go because it's too dangerous. When their disobedience is discovered and swiftly punished, Eme encourages his sons to study harder at school and become "fishermen of the mind" rather than "the kind that fish at a filthy swamp." Thus adjured, the boys agree to devote themselves to their education. But after local madman Abulu curses Ikenna and claims he will be murdered by his brothers, Ikenna begins to act out—disobeying their harried mother, running away, getting drunk, and beating up Boja. Desperate, their mother counts the days until their father will return home and straighten the boy out. But before Eme's arrival, Ikenna is found dead after his most vicious fight with Boja yet. The family is speedily forced to reckon with the violence that has torn them apart, and the joy of childhood which permeates Obioma's lively, energetic debut novel thus swiftly becomes shadowed with the disturbing ghosts of Cain and Abel. Although Benjamin's first-person narration distances the reader from the emotional states of other characters at key moments—especially Benjamin's mother in the aftermath of so much loss—the talented Obioma exhibits a richly nuanced understanding of culture and character. A powerful, haunting tale of grief, healing, and sibling loyalty.