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      • Fiction

        A Sackful of Wishes

        by Azizah Idris

        Hadiza Musa, 25 years old, has been through hell. As a bubbly, fun-loving teenager, she marries the impulsive Abdurrazaq Zanna, known as AR. For eight years, she suffers starvation, rape, and mental abuse from an increasingly obsessive husband. Her beloved father's death, followed by her beloved son's death, brings things to a head. Hadiza determines for a divorce just as AR insists they are meant for each other forever. Thus begins a battle for survival in which scars come to light and allies come from unexpected places.

      • Fiction

        Desperate Desires

        by Rita Egbo

        This is an intricate tale of true love, violence, deceit and death. Susan, a 38-year-old woman, is in a desperate search for a husband. Her life as a spinster is tormented by different men who pierce through her cocoon only to leave her anguished. She undergoes various travails of womanhood, which catapults her into a world of turbulent desolation. Will she survive? Will she survive the burdens of womanhood unscathed? Read on to find out in this unnerving story...

      • Fiction

        Ejiro

        by Israel Joe

        Tragedy always seems to follow Richard Chukwu around, from losing both his parents to getting robbed at the airport and losing an important contact that would have probably changed his story. He has this nagging feeling that he may never find happiness. After roaming the streets for months looking for a job despite his First-Class certificate, everything in his life spirals downward still. Then he meets two old friends - one, his girlfriend from high school, and the other, his friend from the university and the son of the President of Sierra Leone. Richard finds love, a best friend, and a good-paying job. He has paid the price and can finally settle down to enjoy a good life. Or maybe not?

      • Fiction

        Beyond Any Doubt

        by Prof Olowu

        In Beyond Any Doubt, love expression and promotion quests turn to death wishes for a lecturer in an atmosphere of envy, hate, deception, academic and libidinous conflicts. Adeoye, twenty-one, plans to wed Oyinda (twenty-one) during National Service or soon after and become a professor in the future. But he must overcome the temptation posed by Nkechi (twenty), who crushes on him and tackles the cultist who also wants Oyinda as a wife. In the process, he gets implicated in the rape and murder of Oyinda’s flatmate Jumai. A few months after the cops released him for want of evidence to prosecute, Oyinda caught Adeoye in bed with Nkechi and severed her relationship with him. Twenty-one years pass, and Adeoye marries Labi (thirty-three) after she rejects Akin (forty-three), Adeoye’s boss, with whom he competes for women. After three years of a childless marriage, Adeoye decides to marry Rotunda (twenty-six) once he becomes a professor. Hurting from previous losses to Adeoye, Akin swears to thwart his promotion.  Adeoye’s elevation gets aborted just as Rotunda ends their romance. His plan to kill Akin for the setbacks fails and depression sets in. He takes to heavy drinking, vomits, aspirates, and ends in the hospital, unconscious with severe difficulty in breathing. Laboratory tests reveal that deliberate poisoning caused Adeoye’s coma, but by whom? While investigating the poisoning, a cute-looking forty-seven-year-old man traipsed into the Police Department’s lobby, and detective Njideka Anekwe tells herself that the search for Jumai’s killer has ended, but how? What connects Adeoye’s poisoning to Jumai’s killer, and what becomes of Adeoye in this riveting crime and passion story, full of surprise and suspense?

      • Fiction

        The Arewa Anthology

        by Fareedah Mohammed Munir

        The Arewa Anthology is a collection of stories from northern Nigerian women. It highlights the highs and lows of being a woman from different aspects of Arewa life: as daughters, friends, wives, sisters, and mothers.

      • Fiction

        Spirit of Danfo

        by Ugoji Egbujo

        THE SPIRIT OF DANFO is a story of class, power, the legacy of civil war, and maverick gods in Nigeria. In DANFO, Ebulu, a brilliant student, longs to restore his mother, Nkoli, who was ostracised by the village at his father’s death. Ebulu makes a tragic mistake and tempts fate by switching majors from medicine to philosophy. The choice is the first mistake in a chain that imperils his family and promising career. The gods are saboteurs. Ebulu will learn hard lessons on the streets of Lagos, where the pace is set by the city’s pushy, death-defying, and improvisational danfo drivers. DANFO is an intimate portrait of Nigerian city life, illustrating the resilient kindness and humanity of everyday people like Binta and striving to capture the voice of Lagos—most dialogue is in local patois, including Yoruba and Igbo—while aiming a critique at the city’s notorious patronage and corruption

      • Fiction

        TriParty

        by Kikelomo Kuponiyi

        Samuel had been eating his cake and having it for many years, secretly indulging in multiple affairs without his wife Tolani’s knowledge. Along comes the young and delectable Cynthia, and things start falling apart. His marital life becomes an uneasy tri-party, leaving each party angry, heartbroken and dissatisfied. Tolani is devastated when her wonderful marriage unravels at the seams with no warning and little explanation. Cynthia struggles to hold on to a forbidden love with an uncertain future. While trying to fit the broken pieces together, Samuel is suddenly confronted with other factors threatening his job and existence.  Abduction, separation, and birth prove that it is not over until it is over. Sometimes, you can get in trouble without committing any crime. Where does God come in? Journey with the trio to discover if love can beat the odds in this thrilling life adventure.

      • Fiction

        Folktales From Igboland

        by May Ikokwu

        Folktales from Igboland is a collection of moonlight stories, both adapted and original by the Author. The book is in two parts. Part One contains the chapters of stories laced with proverbs; some come with songs. The songs have been scored to make them universally accessible. At the end of each chapter is an exercise to tease the brain or as a study guide. Part Two is dedicated to the work of the Non-Governmental Organisation NGO Save Our Heritage Initiative SOHI; the organisation addresses the fading Igbo heritage, causes, and solutions to the issue.

      • Fiction

        Heal The Hood

        by Adaeze Nwosu

        Hatima Parker is an African-American teenage girl living on the mean streets of South Central Los Angeles. Life in the hood is always tough, but life produces more obstacles when an African-American man named Rodney King is beaten by the LAPD and an African-American teenage girl named Latasha Harlins is murdered by a Korean woman. Hatima dreams of becoming a Marine and an Africanist, and her goals cause her to question her world. She’s not sure if she wants to pursue a career with the US Armed Forces, as that could easily lead to a career in law enforcement. She also finds herself connecting the teachings of Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, the Black Panthers, Marcus Garvey, Frederick Douglass, Nelson Mandela, and other black leaders to the incidents of racism she witnesses in her world in order to see if their many ways to change the status quo were effective and still are. Hatima also starts a relationship with a Korean teenage boy named Joshua Yang. However, since racial tensions are high between African Americans and Korean Americans, there are many people against the biracial couple being together. Hatima learns the world is far from perfect, and throughout 1991 and 1992, she learns how to take a stand against a world that often chooses hatred over love.

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