I Do Not Come to You by Chance

I Do Not Come to You by Chance

2009 • 402 pages

Ratings1

Average rating3

15

[b:I Do Not Come to You by Chance 6265288 I Do Not Come to You by Chance Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1236695900s/6265288.jpg 6448541] is fascinating from the stand point of the setting. As a novice on Nigerian culture & history, I found Nwaubani's loving and honest depiction fascinating. Kingsley's struggle as the opara of his family, who is therefore obligated to provide for his younger siblings and ailing mother, but who doesn't have the “long-leg” to get a job using his degree is both manifestly Nigerian and understandable to anyone who has loved academia. Nwaubani takes care to paint the “419 scams” as both necessary and repulsive, successfully depicting a morally ambiguous area.However, the book falls flat of the mark when it comes to pacing. The plot, such as it is, goes little further than the back of the book and somehow stretches across 400 pages. Character development is fleeting (the only development I noticed was when Kingsley finally realized that he had been either doing what his father said or what Cash Daddy said his whole life, which he realized almost word-for-word as I have typed and then did not reflect on that or change his behavior at all.) The setting alone was not enough to hold my interest; a huge part of the appeal of the book for me was hoping to see change & when I realized none was forthcoming, I finished the last 100 pages at a run mostly to get it finished.

April 4, 2010Report this review