For John Pepper Clark-Bekederemo: Triumphing Over an Imaginary Tragedy
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published June 20, 2011
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When Clark boots him out of his house, he responds with a poorly written book that is remarkable mostly for its vindictiveness and cutting sarcasm. He paints Clark as a has-been writer for whom several doors are no longer open. Did he not know this before going to Clark with a proposal to write a biography about him?A Review of Lola Shoneyin's For The Love of Flight
- By Toni Kan Onwordi
- Published April 21, 2011
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For the Love of Flight is Lola Shoneyin’s third collection of poems and it goes a long way in cementing what is, already, a well deserved reputation as an important literary voice and poet who also happens to write fiction and children’s stories. She also remains the most prolific female Nigerian poet working now or at any other time in the history of Nigerian literature...A Novel that Shines the Eye - A Review by Nal Abdelrasaq
- By Nal Abdelrasaq
- Published March 26, 2011
- Reviews
- Unrated
Naked Light and the Blind Eye’s importance lies in avoiding conventional moralising that might have arisen from the chosen subject matter. It stresses the sanctity of the individual viewpoint as opposed to the public one. It also avoids any form of political sermonising...A Review of Sanya Osha's 'Naked Light and the Blind Eye'
- By E. E. Sule
- Published March 26, 2011
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Perhaps the first thing that strikes one about this novel is its desire to be a poetic rendition. The signs of this desire are palpable and pervasive throughout the story. The author obviously has intended to situate the narrative between the junction at which poetry and story meets; more tellingly, the junction at which poetry exerts its poetic power over narration...Eating the Poetry in Okpanachi's "The Eaters of the Living"
- By Senator Ihenyen
- Published March 22, 2011
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Structured into eight sections, "The Eaters of the Living" attempts to portray a nation, ravaged by anomie, corruption, violence and power - a "carnival of cannibals". In my attempt to devour the work, I will centre this review around what I consider to be Okpanachi's poetic techniques, predominantly, employed in his work to create certain meanings and effects...Literary Voices Alike: Maiwada, Ogezi, and Okenyodo - By E. E. Sule
- By E. E. Sule
- Published August 22, 2010
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These works are different insofar as they are placed side by side with what are being churned out in Nigeria today, especially by writers, highly narcissistic, who are yet to go through the rigour of writing. The originality of these works is blemished by the fact that they smell too much of modernist art. But, perhaps, their rather troubling leap a century backward is to remind us that modernism, especially in Nigerian literature, will continue to linger in some disguises...Between Fantasy and Reality in Maiwada’s Musdoki
- By Isaac Attah Ogezi
- Published July 23, 2010
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Apart from the central theme of love, Musdoki can well be regarded as a reprisal novel to Adichie’s sectional novel, Half of a Yellow Sun, as seen from the eyes of a northern Nigerian zealot-narrator. All the sins of Southern Nigerians against Northerners in this ill-fated union are well-chronicled...Toward an African Renaissance: A Review of Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s Something Torn and New
- By Peter Vakunta
- Published July 21, 2010
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To bar African writers from having recourse to European languages, part of their colonial heritage, in their writing fiction, as Ngugi seems to do is not only contradictory but hypocritical. Such a stance amounts to denying Africans a portion of their past—something a colonizer would do. And anyone who continues in this path might as well abandon the written forms of African languages, since that too is something that colonizers bestowed on Africa...Roar, African, Roar - A Book Review by Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published May 10, 2010
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This is an eclectic collection of short stories offering ample evidence that African literature is alive and well. New talent rises every day from the dawn of yesterday's departure. It provokes thought in the sense that the featured writers challenge the reader's notion of African literature, physical boundaries, and indeed, who we are. Tradition splinters like fragile egg shells as the authors experiment with new forms, and new ideas. It is not always successful, but you come away entertained and informed...Daughters of Eve and Other Tedious Tales
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published April 26, 2010
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This is an anthology so bad, I almost resolved to give in to the fervent wishes of friends and foes - to give up reading and reviewing books. It is becoming an unbearable ordeal. Why did I read this book?Lola Shoneyin’s Love of Flight – A Review by Obemata
- By Obemata (Abdul Mahmud)
- Published February 12, 2010
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Shoneyin‘s ‘For the love of flight’ not only highlights the direction of her feminist poetics but accentuates the themes, the narratives of everyday life evident in her other collections of poems. As always, she locates her poetics within the feminist tradition that resists norms, rebels against patriarchal attitudes and “hones the flints of her existence”...
Chasing After Shadows: A Review of Maik Nwosu’s ‘Alpha Song’
- By Chuks Oluigbo
- Published January 24, 2010
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Like Christopher Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus, Maik Nwosu's Alpha Song re-enacts the motif of the knowledge-seeker. It is a story of insatiable quest, of man’s endless search for meaning, for the true essence of life. But it is a futile search. No one ever finds it. Everything ends in disillusionment...Of Writers, Writing on Conflicts and Wars in Africa
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published January 5, 2010
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This book is several conversations burning at once. The writer Yvonne A. Owuor starts the conversations rolling in a piece she admits is a rant. It is a rant pregnant with profound gems. She questions why the West glorifies its own wars with stories of valor and views Africa’s wars as savage and barbaric, pointing out that there have been equally gory examples to draw from in the West...A Review of Chinedu L. Tabugbo's Country Tour
- By Dike Okoro
- Published January 2, 2010
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The characters in Country Tour are driven by their knowledge of history and their aspirations for a better society. For the reader interested in and familiar with modern African history, this book will certainly serve as a refresher of memory...On Black Sisters’ Street - A Review by Ikhide R. Ikheloa
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published December 13, 2009
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Every character in this book is driven by a deep hunger. Perhaps the monotony of yearning is the story of a Nigeria gradually turning soulless from material lust. In the process, we have learnt to hate ourselves. Energy seems reserved for mimicking the otherness that resides in the West. Unigwe’s book showcases Nigeria as a nation of people deeply invested in acquiring the trappings of an otherness that emanates from the West...
The Niger Delta and the Lost Promise of Outrage
- By Ikhide R. Ikheloa (Nnamdi)
- Published December 5, 2009
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The writer takes on the ambitious job of capturing the devastation of the Delta in prose and sometimes in poetry. It is truly an ambitious project that falls flat on its face and then crumbles from its own weight because it is built on a rickety anemic foundation. The book is a nightmare in terms of design and structure and there is ample evidence that no editor ever read this book...