Queen Eghujovbo champions African stories at film festival in Canada
By Godwin Okondo ACTRESS, public relations professional, and humanitarian Queen Eghujovbo has put a call to African filmmakers to seize
Sam Omatseye’s ‘Juju Eyes’: A roving socio-political commentary maps a
By Anote Ajeluorou CROCODILE Girl is Sam Omatseye’s first novel published in 2011. It chronicles the lives of a stigmatised
Udeme Nana: Looking 30 at 60 with flowers of beautiful
By Substance Udo-Nature It is instructive that at 60, Dr. Udeme Nana is not celebrated amongst friends as an aristocrat
At BookTrek, Henry Akubuiro inspires students, laments out-of-school children
ON a vibrant Friday afternoon in Okota, Lagos, the atmosphere at Germane Primus Tutors (GPT) was charged with excitement and
Okeowhor Odinakachi’s ‘Sonnets of Life’s Little Moments’ inspires from sunrise
By Humphrey Ogu THERE is an axiom that admonishes us against judging a book by its cover. That expression does
RECENT UPDATES
Top Highlights
Creativity, Literary Advocacy and Nation Building: The Role
By Akachi Ezeigbo ABSTRACTThe people of what is today known as
A Fork in the Road: Which Way, Nigeria?
By Kunle Ajibade LET me begin by thanking Toyin Akinosho, Jahman
Why the culture factor matters in creating a
By Taiwo Ajai-Lycett NICCOLO Machiavelli, the master political tactician, long before
A Fork in the Road: Ori’ta Meta –
By Ayisha Osori Greetings. Salutations. Acknowledgements.My salutations to the organizers of
ANA/NBRP partnership: exploring the art of children’s writing
* ‘Children’s writing is potential growth area for creative writing in
When ‘An Evening of Virtues’ celebrated the life,
‘Nigeria’s public life is in shortage of personalities like Onosode’ ‘Those
Categories
Featured Posts
FEATURED POSTS

Telling Africa’s story our way – Colette Otusheso leads groundbreaking documentary premiere
Read More »Popular Stories
Udeme Nana: Looking 30 at 60 with flowers of beautiful
By Substance Udo-Nature It is instructive that at 60, Dr. Udeme Nana is not celebrated amongst friends as an aristocrat
Abraham Uyovbisere: The master who painted life into art
By Mudiare Onobrakpeya ABRAHAM Uyovbisere was a man who knew how to capture the intangible—the grace of movement, the quiet
Remembering Kole Omotoso
By Maxim Uzoato KOLE Omotoso was my teacher at the then University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University, with pre-Nobel
Tribute to Joop Berkhout
By Kolade Mosuro HE had lived in the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia, a wandering
Ernest Emenyonu pays tribute to Joop Berkhout
By Wole Adedoyin EMERITUS Professor Ernest Nneji Emenyonu, Emeritus, a professor of Africana Studies at the University of Michigan-Flint, has
Joop Berkhout: Death and a writer’s loss
By Wale Okediran ON one sunny day in July 1987 at the Enugu Trade Fair grounds in Enugu, Nigeria when