This House Has Fallen
Nigeria In Crisis
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
To understand Africa, one must understand Nigeria, and few Americans understand Nigeria better than Karl Maier. This House Has Fallen is a bracing and disturbing report on the state of Africa's most populous, potentially richest, and most dangerously dysfunctional nation. Each year, with depressing consistency, Nigeria is declared the most corrupt state in the entire world. Though Nigeria is a nation into which billions of dollars of oil money flow, its per capita income has fallen dramatically in the past two decades. Military coup follows military coup. A bellwether for Africa, it is a country of rising ethnic tensions and falling standards of living, very possibly on the verge of utter collapse -- a collapse that could dramatically overshadow even the massacres in Rwanda. A brilliant piece of reportage and travel writing, This House Has Fallenlooks into the Nigerian abyss and comes away with insight, profound conclusions, and even some hope. Updated with a new preface by the author.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"We... ignore Nigeria at our peril," warns Maier, a journalist who was stationed in Africa for more than a decade (as a London Independent correspondent). Nigeria, the tenth most populous country in the world and the sixth largest oil producer, is home to more than 300 distinct ethnic groups--and it is a society in total chaos. Billions of dollars have flowed into Nigeria in exchange for oil, yet most people live in grinding poverty; meanwhile, ethnic and religious strife threatens to split the country apart, and years of ineffectual and corrupt military rule have resulted in a lack of health and educational services. In painting an often depressing portrait, Maier (Into the House of Ancestors) argues these facts have combined to create civil disorder and despair in the country that is possibly the most important on the African continent. Maier untangles Nigeria's political and social chaos for readers by talking to individual Nigerians--desperately poor Igbos, angry taxicab drivers, military and religious leaders, businessmen--and creating out of these encounters a compelling narrative, though one that fails to cohere at points when it feels as though Maier has pasted together old articles with the glue of historical background. In an effort to learn something about Nigeria's hope--and despair--for the future, he writes about Ken Saro-Wiwa, the Ogoni activist who was hanged by the government; about a doctor/hotel owner who is also the founder of a political party; and about angry young revolutionaries who no longer have any faith in the system. Throughout, Maier puts a human face on a disheartening situation that seems remote and impersonal to most Americans. Maps.