Caroline Criado Perez, the fiery feminist author behind Invisible Women (2019) and Do It Like A Woman (2021), has clinched...
JoinedApril 6, 2019
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Sir Salman Rushdie is set to release his first work of fiction since 2023’s Victory City—a powerful new collection titled...
Val Kilmer, the charismatic and versatile actor known for his unforgettable roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and Tombstone, has...
Lights, cameras and web-slingers took centre stage at CinemaCon as Sony Pictures dropped a bombshell: “Spider-Man 4” is officially titled...
Chris Brown announced his 20th anniversary tour on March 27, celebrating two decades since his self-titled debut album launched him...
To celebrate Mattel’s 80th anniversary, Corey Helford Gallery (CHG) and Mattel Creations have teamed up for “Toys As Art: Mattel’s...
Marvel Studios has officially shelved its troubled “Blade” reboot, ending years of speculation and behind-the-scenes turmoil, according to faroutmagazine.co.uk. The...
The ArtMiabo International Art Festival (AMIAF) is set to transform Lagos into a global nexus for art, commerce, and innovation....
The Book of Everything is laced with humour, much of it delivered through the unforgettable Uncle Ibe and Egwuatu, the lawyer whose diction is gargantuan. More than once, I found myself chuckling, pausing to relish the wit before continuing. Told in the first person and set across America, Nigeria, and South Africa, Nwosu explores the clash between the ancient and the modern and the ordinary and the fantastical in prose as smooth as honey
However, if I turn a blind eye to these inconsistencies, I would place Baby Farm as one of the most thrilling offerings from the Nigerian film industry. There is a seamlessness to the production that doesn't feel forced. Characters, through the actors, come to life in this
I remembered Nigeria in snatches; roofs of houses overlapping each other, lying like broken china in the sun in cities that suffer from insomnia. Storey buildings where churches and plazas are attached like appendages with speakers raised to alarming decibels vying for the right to make you deaf. Noise was a way of life.
Michael Afenfia has just released his eighth book, Head of the Baptist, from Paperworth Books, in which he once again...















