To Kill a Monkey review: The Monkey on the Programmer’s Back
Kemi Adetiba’s To Kill a Monkey is a show defined by a powerful central idea: the moment a desperate man decides to kill his conscience.…
Kemi Adetiba’s To Kill a Monkey is a show defined by a powerful central idea: the moment a desperate man decides to kill his conscience.…
Dream Count is not the sweeping saga of Adichie’s acclaimed Americanah or the generational epic of Half of a Yellow Sun. Instead, it’s a finely-wrought,…
Blooming Under Bradford Skies is a masterful assemblage of rich works by Nigerian and British writers who have made Bradford their home. Under the literary…
Muslims need to look no further than the Quran for guidance, where there are approximately 200 verses concerning the environment.— Ibrahim Ozdemir When asked about…
In his striking debut collection, I Cry at the Feet of My Other Body and Other Stories, Mustapha Enesi turns his sharp eye to the…
Nana Sule’s debut novel, Not So Terrible People, is a collection of 11 speculative and mysterious tales, a bold mix of ghosts, angels, jinn, and…
In this debut collection, Zaynab Ilyasu Bobi, with profound linguistic dexterity, navigates the complexities of grief, displacement, and geopolitical conflict by weaving her Hausa and Islamic heritage into a vivid mosaic of universal human experience.
Afamefuna: An Nwa Boi Story, Kayode Kasum’s celebratory stab at the nwa boi system, starts at the end and then advances towards the beginning. It…
There comes a time in a woman’s life when she has experienced heartbreak(s), or as the popular phrase goes these days, “chopped breakfast(s).” The way…