- Published: 30 June 2024
- ISBN: 9781529153460
- Imprint: Hutchinson Heinemann
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 384
- RRP: $45.00
The Road to the Country

















- Published: 30 June 2024
- ISBN: 9781529153460
- Imprint: Hutchinson Heinemann
- Format: Hardback
- Pages: 384
- RRP: $45.00
A remarkable talent
Independent
A major new African writer
Salman Rushdie
Obioma is truly the heir to Chinua Achebe
New York Times
A truly gifted writer, Obioma has proven yet again that he's a literary treasure
Nicole Dennis-Benn
A spectacular blend of realism and mysticism, The Road to the Country is Chigozie Obioma at his finest. He is a novelist in a league of his own
Imbolo Mbue, New York Times bestselling author of Behold the Dreamers
This powerfully evocative and intimate book is unarguably Obioma’s finest. Through subtle, piercing, and gripping language, he renders those seemingly simple but unforgettable moments when our lives intertwine with history, anchoring you to the pages until the end. The Road to the Country will remind you that our existence is the histories of past, present, and the future—and the importance of understanding that. This is among the best books I’ve read in a while and is certainly destined to be a classic
Ishmael Beah
A spectacular blend of realism and mysticism, The Road to the Country is Chigozie Obioma at his finest. He is a novelist in a league of his own
Imbolo Mbue
Chigozie Obioma has proven his mastery of craft in this sweeping, brilliant, and stunning novel. The Road to the Country is an eloquent, beautifully rendered study on time and place and the history that changed a nation. His is a gorgeous prose, and the storytelling one expects from a gifted writer. . . . A truly unforgettable read
Nicole Dennis-Benn
Incredibly moving and hopeful. Both an adventure story and a portrait of brotherhood, love and companionship. In each beautifully crafted sentence, Obioma shows us how the best of humanity is often created under extreme pressure
Nadifa Mohamed
A writer who wields both the grand and the intimate with incredible precision and power. Obioma reminds us it is all real, even the surreal, and in his hands anything is possible. A wondrous novel
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, author of CHAIN-GANG ALL-STARS
There is hope, warmth, and moments of beauty. After stepping into this book, I don’t think I will ever completely step out. it will stay with me forever
Jenny Mustard
Set in the Biafran War, [THE ROAD TO THE COUNTRY is] a gutsy, often gory coming-of-age tale with romance at its heart. We follow Kunle, whose quest to find his brother, lost during the conflict, sees him taking up arms — only for matters to get more complicated when he falls for a nurse in the field. Obioma follows the war novelist’s time-honoured strategy of transporting us viscerally into the fear and panic of battle, to say nothing of the drudgery and squalor. Mystical interludes portray the action as viewed from afar by a seer, but it’s earthy grit that propels this gripping period re-creation
Daily Mail
The Road to the Country links the past and present. Mr Obioma has been described as the heir to Chinua Achebe, a 20th-century Nigerian novelist. He pulls from the same wells of rage and horror as his literary forebear did in a book from 2012 about the same war. Nigeria's wounds , still untreated, have festered
The Economist
Fliting between the real and the supernatural, [The Road to the Country] captures the country’s faultlines in language and form
The Economist - Best Books of 2024
Astonishing ... the writing is so crisp, the story so unusual, that I couldn't put the book down ... A remarkable, mythic book
Alice Walker
Obioma writes with gorgeous restraint reminiscent of the intricate prose of a Tolstoy novella. Every sentence delivers a precise and heartfelt blow. Hardly anyone writing today is delivering this level of intricacy, lyricism and control
Alexandra Fuller
An exciting young writer
Brit Bennett
A sweeping, heart-racing, mystical novel about a university student in Lagos trying to save his brother, and himself, amid the chaos of Nigeria’s civil war – a story of love, friendship, and personal triumph by the two-time Booker Prize finalist and "the heir to Chinua Achebe"
New York Times
Chigozie Obioma is that rare thing: an original. His world is a mix of the real and the folkloric, and his writing sounds like no one else's
Wall Street Journal
With heartbreaking realism, Obioma captures the dizzying atmosphere of despair, determination, and chaos surrounding the Biafran soldiers. This livewire war story is not to be missed’
starred review, Publishers Weekly
With confident empathy, Obioma remarkably imbues breathtaking beauty into the (quotidian) horrors of war. Beyond geographical and historical specificities here, the world’s harrowing, ongoing conflagrations underscore the timeless urgency of Obioma’s latest triumph
starred review, Booklist
Obioma has captured the essential elements of the war novel—the near-death experience, the tragic losses, the flickering moments of generosity and grace—but he inhabits them with a rare command, empathy, and intensity of feeling. … A top-tier war novel, inventive and cleareyed about the consequences of violence
starred review, Kirkus Reviews
I daresay the tragedy of the Biafran struggle has found its groaning masterpiece
The Brooklyn Rail
Obioma's The Road to the Country is a powerful testimony to the importance of stories: the stories that came before us, the stories we create for our own selves, and the stories left behind'
Chicago Review of Books
Absorbing ... A tale Nigerians need to read
The Nation Newspaper
A master of metaphor ... The Road to the Country's depiction of trench warfare, the extraordinary stress of being a soldier under constant fire, and the camaraderie that bonds men and women together recalls Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front ... The language is resonant ... and often uniquely expressive in its depiction of the demands war places on an individual ... Obioma's novel can be read as a warning
Financial Times
The Road to the Country is a painstaking novel, and necessarily a painful one too ... It is a story as old as time itself, told across cultures and among all people: a man is thrust into something beyond him ... the novel is as much Bildungsroman as battle song
London Review of Books
Obioma has spent both of his previous novels trying to work out the social and cultural substance of Nigeria. The Road to the Country is, perhaps aptly, given its title, his most defined attempt yet
Barney Horner, New Statesman
Obioma powerfully reveals the brutality of war ... [with] threads of humanity, love and redemption throughout
Prudence Wade, Sunday Express