 | Wole Soyinka - Biography & Autobiography - 1981 - 230 pages
The Nigerian playwright, poet, and novelist recounts his first eleven years growing up under the influence of his parents, traditional Yoruba customs, and Christian missionaries | |
 | Jean Toomer - Fiction - 1975 - 116 pages
Poetic sketches and stories stemming from the Harlem Renaissance author's teaching experience in rural Georgia communicate his feelings about nature's beauty and man's greed ... | |
 | Isidore Okpewho - Fiction - 2004 - 260 pages
A young African American falls into periodic spasms and chants a text that nobody understands. His troubled family seeks help. The text, recorded by a psychiatrist and ... | |
 | Ben Okri - History - 1988 - 194 pages
Noveller fra 1980ernes Lagos om den rige og fattige indbyggere. | |
 | Beryl Gilroy - Fiction - 1996 - 153 pages
After false starts in teaching and social work, Melda Hayley finds her mission in fostering the damaged children of her fellow black settlers in a deeply racist Britain in the ... | |
 | Buchi Emecheta - Fiction - 1994 - 144 pages
After living in London for several years with a prestigious banking job, Kehinde agrees to return to her native Nigeria with her husband and children, but must decide whether ... | |
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