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Ken Saro-Wiwa aroused powerful emotions in his life, and his death by hanging on the orders of General Sani Abacha shook the world. The sainthood of Saro-Wiwa has been promoted in much of the media, but some polemical voices assert that he was more sinner than saint. In the title essay of Remembering Ken Saro-Wiwa and Other Essays, Adewale Maja-Pearce strikingly delves beyond the myths into the man in full, warts and all, portraying an ambitious protagonist who initially cultivated powerful friends in the military, in government and business but ended up tragically through judicial murder engendered by the fratricidal crossfire of the Ogoni struggle. Like its subject, controversy dogged every step of this book, and the publishing was nearly stopped as people took positions without reading a word of it. Now that the book is finally out the public is gifted with the pristine opportunity of dipping into the immense world of Maja-Pearce as he, in twenty-three heartfelt essays and reviews, illuminates the benighted mores of modern Nigeria, the identity question in South Africa, the evil politics from cape to coast of Africa, and the seminal minds across the world. This book is a treasure, a profound testament.- Uzor Maxim Uzoatu
An uncompromising look at Nigeria’s crisis of democracy by a renowned essayist and critic.
A Peculiar Tragedy is a critical biography of John Pepper Clark, better known as J.P. Clark, one of the foremost of Nigeria's first generation writers that include the Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and famous novelist Chinua Achebe. Indeed, they're often seen as a troika, with Clark sitting at the apex of poetry, Soyinka at that of drama and Achebe prose.In many ways this book is about the relationships that developed among the three, starting from their days in the 1950s at the University College, Ibadan. It's also a critical analysis of the quantum of work Clark produced over time against their social and political circumstances. Adewale Maja-Pearce dwells on the Nigerian Civil War and the impact it had on the lives and work of the writers as Clark backed the federal forces, Soyinka went to prison for dissent while Achebe joined the secessionist Biafra.
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