“My story is quite reminiscent of Fela’s in that regard. There is an abiku story to Fela’s life,” Lemi Ghariokwu says, growing animated as the subject moves to metaphysics. “There was a child that was born and was given a Dutch name in Fela’s family but he died and the mother went to see a native doctor who told her the child was not happy to be burdened with an English name. She got pregnant again and had Fela.”
Finally the winds of change that had blown first in Ghana when the decolonisation movement began in 1952, made their way south down to Rhodesia, the last outpost of empire in Africa.
The winds of change blew us out of our township and into the suburbs.
The winds of changed blew me into the Queen Victoria Memorial Library.
The Lagos Review announces Sneak Peek, a series that provides a space for authors and publishers to share their works-in-progress...





