Showing posts with label Author: Nana Awere Damoah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author: Nana Awere Damoah. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Excerpts from Nana Awere Damoah's Tales from Different Tails


This is an excerpt from an upcoming anthology by Nana Awere Damoah. Until now, Nana Damoah's writing has revolved around creative non-fiction, pulling out his experiences and experiences of varied people to motivate others shape their life. Most often, people are more willing to leave others dabble in their mistakes and only tweet the #RIP for facebook some few words when their crooked ways lead them to their lives. We have come to a point in time when people pity you when you're dead, afraid of telling you in the face that your ways will lead you to disaster for fear of 'hurting their feelings'. However, when you're gone they can shower you with all the advice you don't need. That's why I love Nana's two previous books: Through the Gates of Thoughts and Excursions in my Mind. People have virtually become hypocrites, smiling and 'lol' even when they don't mean it, even when they say in their hearts 'WTF'. We are gradually becoming a people of sycophants, willing to live in our individualistic ways whilst thinking that others interconnectivity will solve the problem.

But I digress. Very big. What I bring you today is an excerpt from Nana's creative fiction side homonymously titled Tales from Different Tails. I will be bringing you a review of this soon, however until then enjoy these excerpts.
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Everyone has a price and… their broom. You either name the price or find the broom that sweeps them off their feet!

October Rush
The new academic year has started and school is under siege. Reason? ‘October Rush’. Heads keep turning as students struggle to juggle academic work with relationship wahala. The freshers are tagged New Stock, sophomores as Reduce to Clear while final years are Buy One Get On Free. Follow ‘October Rush’ as it tells the intricate story of University romance. For some, it is learning the ropes, for others it is a do or die affair.  Find your feet in this hot, intense, and pacey affair. The Rush is on!

Truth Floats
It is true that the one who you save the bullet for might be the one pulling the trigger. So the story goes that Kweku Ananse took the meat right out of his bosom friend, Akoto’s, mouth when he stole Ama Adoma from him. But it is also true that when they lie they will lie again because the deception never end. Amidst the lies and disloyalty truth comes to light like a calabash that has been forced in water. All said and done, did Ama fall for Kweku? How did Akoto find out about his fiancé, Ama’s, true love for him? This story teaches the values of patience, perseverance and love in the face of lies.

Dribble de Zagidibogidi
Vengeance is of God but can the human mind truly forgive and forget? Zagidibogidi (Randy) is accused of brutally raping Rose, the only lady he would catch the moon for. As things turn out, Rose is the only one who could save him from going to jail. Wicked twist? Rose has fallen into coma.  But help comes from strange places. Babyface, Randy’s lawyer, vowed to do his best to prove his client’s innocence. Will justice be denied by it being delayed? Could there be some unfinished business with Babyface on Get Even Day? Revenge must be sweet when served cold and slowly…it is payback time! Yes, a broken mirror can be patched but the crack will forever be there.

Hope Undeferred
The elders say women are supposed to sell garden eggs not gun powder. But Araba’s heart aches for Kwesi. What risks can a young lady take in making her love known to the man she loves? Should she go ahead and propose love? For the most haunted spinster in Assin Kabrofo, it is only a matter of time before she loses heartthrob Kwesi. This unwritten law in African setting is eating away this beautiful village queen. But do African gods condone breaking gender ranks? Hope can only be held onto with hands and feet. And with prayer that it is not dashed to pieces as pottery on the rocks that line the banks of River Ankobra.

Kojo Nkrabeah
The only stories villagers hear of the city is that of glamour with streets paved with gold, money hanging on trees and the taps overflowing with milk and honey. This story shatters the dream of city life for Kojo Nkrabeah and Akwasi Poku. Akilipee has come to Moseaso from the city with well embellished stories. These stories lured the orphaned Kojo Nkrabeah and his friend, Akwasi Poku. In their haste to escape their mundane village lives, they learn the hard way where the  grass is green. This is not your ordinary village-to-city story but one that immerses the reader into the best of both worlds.

Guardian of the Rented Well
Akos is a married woman who wants her book published. Benson wants everything in skirt. How does he draw the line between pleasure with this taken lady and the business at hand? This story shows the resolve of married women and the extent to which they go to show or betray love and trust.

Was it Akos who coveted Benson to get her way? Or it was Benson who risked his life guarding the rented well. What has all this got to do with Lieutenant Patrick Atiemo? Something has to give, but what? Follow this maze of a crazy love affair gone terribly wrong …

Face to Face – Trotro Palaver
If you have not taken a trotro, aka troski in Ghana, then either you are not a Ghanaian or haven’t visited Ghana. The ordinary man’s means of transportation in Ghana comes with lots of hustle and drama. The tight seating arrangements, the conversations, the potpourri of smells the laughter, gossips, the political debates as well as the twists, turns and trickery to outwit the police. This adventure brings you face to face as we take a short winding yet hilarious ride in the old Morris troski, with registration number ABC 4037. Join Akwasi the aplanke (drivers mate) who holds a PhD in cunning, slippery mathematics and his master, Massa Kojo, the man who uses a toothpick in his mouth like a ceiling brush, as they drive us from Pig Farm to Circle.... vroooooommmmmm.......Away bus!

Project Akoma
When the heart decides, it is the mind that plans. A message sent to the mind simply reads: “I have found my desire—my missing rib,” and sets the brain in motion. Stories of human love always go with sorrow, joy, deceit, unfailing dedication and jealousy. To win the heart of this striking beauty of eve’s daughter, he must climb the seven skies and back, he must scale the China wall to profess love and win her heart. A moving rollercoaster of a love story which takes readers through the steps to win Adjoa’s heart. This was so delicate and complicated it had to be handled like a final year project work on a University campus. Was this another happily ever after tale or a masterpiece of storytelling with sting at the very end?
  
Tales from Different Tails will be launched on 1 December 2011 at the Teacher's Hall Complex near Workers' College and Tigo Headoffice, Adabraka, Accra, at 6pm. This is Nana Awere Damoah's third book, the first two being Excursions in My Mind (2008) and Through the Gates of Thought (2010).

Thursday, September 29, 2011

109. Excursions in My Mind by Nana Awere Damoah

Title: Excursions in My Mind
Author: Nana Awere Damoah
Publishers: Athena Press
Pages: 134
Year of First Publication: 2008
Country: Ghana

Read for Amy's BAND

Nana Awere Damoah's book Excursions in my Mind began that which was continued in Through the Gates of Thought. As in the latter, this book of inspiration used examples from the author's own life and from varied sources; prominent figures and books like the bible were not spared. The book was written in simple language and unlike many other books on motivation and inspiration, here the reader - perhaps the Ghanaian or African reader - could be able to relate quite well with most of the examples cited.

Each series - as a chapter is referred to in this 134-page book - begins with a short story or an exposition of the theme or subject matter. The author then goes on to give 'Action Exercise' in an attempt to encouraging the reader implement that which he had read. Most at times this is followed by quotes and on few occasions by a poem that gives further expatiation on the said theme.

In all there are thirty-six series with a bonus one, ranging from Books and Knowledge to The Mountain Story covering themes like, goal-setting, financial prudence, dreams, friendship, responsibility, learning, faithfulness, shyness, fear, forgiveness, learning from a loss, waiting and or working for what we want and more. These are themes that are applicable to our lives. Most of my favourite series are those taken directly from the author's life. Nana discusses his family openly, showing us what goes on within - the dynamics, the challenges, the sacrifices that his parents had to make to send him through school, making him the person he is now. Appreciation comes when one realises that the cost of education requires a willing and able parents to see their children through to the end. Thus, unlike, perhaps, in other places, education is a privilege when it comes one way; that achieved through the sacrifice of parents, especially those in the middle and lower economic class. The author does not back away from the negatives but more importantly he shows us that there are positives even within a negative life, which is what we should concentrate on. Though the author does not shy away from his Christian affiliation, which is seen by his outright declaration, his use of language and quotes from the bible, he also does not dissociate himself from his traditions. And like all themes, he looks at the positive side of this too. He agrees to the proverb 'if your parents look after you for your teeth to grow, you must look after them for their teeth to fall out'. He demonstrates this using personal examples from his life. Even when Nana Damoah lost his two brothers and a father in a year, he was able to learn from this, realising how ephemeral our life in this world is and how fast we reduce to zero when death comes knocking.

With short chapters and precise language, Nana Damoah has crafted a book that would resonate with a lot of readers, both on this side of the globe with his personal examples, and with everyone through his expositions and quotes. Could this book be the beginning of a memoir? Could this be the beginning of something bigger? Reading every series and the references to his family giving precise years - sometimes to the exact date and day - one is bound to believe that these series would coalesce into a memoir sometime to come. For don't we all have something to say from our lives? And here Nana's eidetic memory that seems to make the words come alive on the page would serve him excellently. And when it does, I would be here to read and review it.

This book is recommended and even those for whom any mention of the biblical texts is toxic to their health, there is something to learn from this book if such individuals choose to take the content but not its associated source.
___________________________
Brief Bio: Nana Awere Damoah was born in Accra, Ghana. He holds a Masters in Chemical Engineering from the University of Nottingham, UK, a first degree in Chemical Engineering from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana. A British Council Chevening alumnus, Nana works with Unilever Ghana Limited. Nana started serious writing in 1993 when he was in sixth form and has had a number of his short stories published in the Mirror and the Spectator. In 1997, he won first prize in the Step magazine National Story Writing Competition. His short story Truth Floats was published in the first edition of African Roar Anthology. He is the creator and editor of Story Loom. (Read more here)

ImageNations Rating: 4.5/6.0

Monday, July 05, 2010

An Interview with Author Nana Awere Damoah

IMAG: You have been writing that long, as I read in your book. But what inspired you to start writing? Which books did you read as a child growing up?

NAD: My very first article, published in “Through the Gates of Thought”, was written in 1993, so I trace my writing life to that year. But my appreciation of the literary and my involvement in things literary actually started much earlier, in the Preparatory school in the early ‘80s when each class had to perform a play a day before the vacation day. Small beginnings, appreciation of the arts, learning the rudiments of prose and poetry. I remember being taught, in preparation for the Common Entrance in preparatory school, to answer the question: write a story ending with ‘…and the boy learnt a lesson for life, that obedience is better than sacrifice.’ Small beginnings of creative writing.


Then in Form one, in 1986, I wrote what I consider my first creative work, in (you won’t believe this) my history class: “A day in Carthage”. It was purely fictional, and I loved it! In the sixth form, we wanted to form a Literary Club and that was what led me to write that first article. My first break as a writer came in 1995 when I submitted a short story, ‘The showdown’, to the popular weekly newspaper The Mirror, and it was published! Seeing my name in print, knowing that this newspaper was the best selling paper in Ghana and circulated all over the country, gave me immense confidence and encouragement. My skills were further honed when I joined the Literary Wing of the Christian fellowship during University.


In my early days, and this hasn’t changed much, I wrote a lot during the day, in my study notebooks, on sheets of paper, whenever and wherever inspiration hit. I continued to submit stories to The Mirror, the Spectator (which published one story), magazines on the University campus and shared my writings with the Literary club and also posted on notice boards in the Department and my hall of residence, Katanga Hall. Some of them were published, some were rejected! I also did a lot of reading in the secondary school and University, to learn about various writing styles.


I started my writing journey with essays, but moved swiftly into short stories. In 1997, I entered and won a national competition for true short stories. I got into poetry in the University, during my undergraduate years, and used to recite my poems in church. I started writing these essays which form the material for both books, in Oct 2004 and circulated to my friends via email. When I was in the UK for my masters, I started updating them on the blog (www.excursionsinmymind.blogspot.com).


I would say my two English teachers – Mrs Ayiah and Mr Thompson – inspired me a lot, as they expressed some faith in my essays and compositions. I was also inspired by a strong desire to share what I learnt – in my bible studies, in my reading, what I learnt through observation and experience – with my friends. It must have started via letters I wrote to new converts made during crusades of Joyful Way Incorporated (I have been a member since 1992). I am motivated by my desire to make my impact on my society, with my thoughts.


Growing up, I read a lot of fairy tales in Preparatory school, especially those translated from Russian (I can’t remember where I got them from, possibly from my uncle and sister who travelled to Nigeria). In Secondary school, I devoured the Pacesetters series and the African Writers series. I remember reading about four books in the Pacesetters series per day; because they were small books, they were prone to theft by the students so you had to sign for them at the librarian’s desk before taking them. I would pick on, submit in about an hour and a half and sign for another – it was fun! That must have encouraged me to become a Library Prefect in Sixth form and that is when I started experimenting with my pen.

IMAG: Your works seem to be inspirational and motivational, and they tackle the very root of the Ghanaian problem, if I should say so. To what extent do you think your book (Through the Gates of Thought) can help solve this problem?

NAD: In sharing through my writings, my earnest hope is that I may be able to change even one mind. If I can change one such mind, I would have contributed to the agenda of building our nation, our continent, our world. That is why I ensure the reader is not left hanging without an action point, each article provokes the reader to take an action, upon reflecting on the main points.


IMAG:
 How different is your book (Through the Gates of Thought) different from any other inspirational books?

NAD: I prefer to refer to my book as reflective, rather than motivational. The analogy in the differentiation is this: a motivational book may provoke you, positively, to start running, in whatever direction - that is speed. A reflective book, which is more than yet inclusive of motivational, will cause you to run, in a direction, knowing where and why you are running – that is velocity. Because it matters not how hard you row the boat if you are headed in the wrong direction.


IMAG: You seem to remember most events and especially the dates on which they occurred. How do you do that?


NAD: Haha, I guess it is a gift. OK, seriously, I like to note a lot of things down, so I keep journals and diaries, some dating back to the early ‘90s. For instance, I have the original copies of the scripts for two chapters in the book: ‘Gate 9: The Written Letter’ and ‘Gate 14: Do this and you will be on top!’, which were both written in the ‘90s. Some of the dates I also get from the letters I exchanged. Finally, above all, I reflect on these occurrences in my life for years, so I do have some of the dates firmly entrenched in my memory.


IMAG: How are you able to combine working full-time at Unilever (a work I believe is very demanding) with writing (something I know is demanding)?


NAD: Nana, it all comes down to passion for me. I look at my writing as more than a hobby, I see it as a ministry, as the main vehicle and medium for me to impact my generation and beyond. I view it as my ministry and a legacy I can leave: How you treat the talent you have is a reflection on how you view it in the total picture of what you are here on earth to do. I see my writing as a ministry, because as a friend told me, through these I can reach some who may never be within the confines of a church. Because I see it as such, I invest in it, knowing and believing that through this talent, I can be significant. In the parable of the talents, the guy with one talent missed an opportunity to become a banker! Look again at his master’s response to him.


So I create time for the things that matter and what I believe in. So when friends ask me numerous times how I am able to get time to write. I tell them I don’t get time, I make time. I usually write at dawn (my thoughts are clearer when the world is asleep), or when I am not too tired after work, in the evenings, sitting in the living room with the family. I once asked a mentor of mine, Ace Ankomah, how he could make time for his legal work, lay preaching, lecturing, playing the bass guitar at church, teaching choirs, etc. His response? “I sleep less!”


When you believe in something, go for it. The monetary gain for me is just surplus, the personal satisfaction cannot be quantified. I wake up each day knowing, as I write, that my thoughts are affecting lives, my talent is not wasted, I am relevant

On another level, I use writing to distress after work. When I am down and feeling low, I write as a therapy.


IMAG: How involved are you in the literary circles in Ghana, as I read your novel Truth Floats in the first edition of African Roar?


NAD: Not as much as I would love to. I am still working on that, but have been engaging online with some established and emerging writers and poets like Albert & Comfort Ocran, Alba K Sumprim, Ayesha Harruna Attah, Boakyewaa Glover, Ato Kwamena Dadzie, Esi Cleland, Danny Hanson and Kwaku Sonny. I have met a couple of them face-to-face. There is a project in the offing by one leading author and publisher for an author’s forum soon, we will see how it goes. I am still work in progress and I intend to tap into the experience of those who have gone ahead of me.


IMAG: How do you see the Literary Scene in Ghana? Is it progressing or retrogressing? 


NAD: My humble view is that it is beginning to rise again, progressively. A new set of writers are coming up after the golden generation of Ama Ataa Aidoo, Ayi Kwei Armah, Efua Sutherland and Atukwei Okai; this is encouraging. We don’t have a dearth of writing talent, I am sure of that. The formation of book clubs also must go on, we need to excite our people, especially the youth to read. We still have a long way to go, and we have only now started the drive upwards after the decline. I hope I am contributing my quota with my books. I have also observed a growing trend of public readings and poetry events – that is great!


IMAG: Your observations about Ghanaians in Gate 15 is keen. It is something I have talked about on my blog before and something I still do talk about. How have you, as a person, solved it or tried overcoming such a problem, because sometimes it is synonymous to life in Ghana and it is easy for one to be classified as opinionated (or 'too known' in the Ghanaian parlance) if one decides to eschew such vices?


NAD: Our problem, Nana, is not a scarcity of resources – human, natural, intellectual, etc;  our problem is our unwillingness or our lack of motivation to take action on what we know is right. We are good at diagnosing the root causes of problems (and I wrote about that in Gate 4: ‘Infant Steps’) but so pathetic at action. That is why I am focused on contributing my bit towards a mindset change. It is all in the mind, because why should the Ghanaian behave differently when he is outside the borders of this nation? I am trying to help in overcoming it, in my own life and actions, in what I influence in my coaching and counseling of my team at work and in voluntary societies. I just posted on my Facebook status that if we would all exhibit the world-class attitude and fighting spirit plus the urge to die for the name of our nation as the Black Stars did at this world cup 2010, what a nation we would have! We need both mindset and attitudinal change. There is hope yet!


IMAG: Reading your book, I know you are a Christian, and I know also that you were in the University Hall (I was in Unity Hall between 1999 and 2003) and therefore a Katangee. How were you able to live within the negative perception the Hall carries and come out unscathed?


NAD: Do you REALLY want me to talk about the only hall in the world? J Katangees are the best people you could meet in the world, we do things with all our heart. I spent almost six happy years in that hall, and loved it! Living in Katanga was good for me as a Christian, there was no room for lukewarmness, either you were a serious Christian or you were not! There was such a great cloud of witnesses around you at all times, ensuring that you live as you professed. But what negative perception are you talking about? Katanga for life!


IMAG: Which books are your all time favourites, if there are any

NAD: Chinua Achebe’s “Things fall apart” is an all-time favorite. I am also a biography buff, and I have a good collection. I have read so many novels I can’t even remember. And yes, “How to make friends and influence people” by Dale Carnegie is another great favorite, the first non-fiction book that had a very great influence on my life, and changed my views, actually. The first time I read it, I borrowed from a friend, and that was around 1991/92. I took copious notes which I still have! Since then, I have re-read it a number of times.


IMAG: What do you have to say to Ghanaians and also to writers?


NAD: For Ghanaians, let me say that life is a business to be worked at and lived, not just dreamed about, and that in doing this, we need to be ‘learning people’ – there is an example, a message, a lesson, a warning or a moral you can discover in every scene of the play that is  called ‘life.’ He is never old who continues to learn and he is already old who ceases to learn. Harvey Ullman puts the same thought this way: “Anyone who stops learning is old, whether this happens at twenty or eighty. Anyone who keeps on learning not only remains young but becomes constantly valuable regardless of physical capacity.” As an Engineer/Author, I seek to be an example to our youth that they can experiment and explore, and not to let their scope and influence on their generation be restricted by their formal training, to stop restricting themselves to the box or pigeon-hole when they can go beyond the perimeter and reach the pinnacle of their potential, to grasp the verity that talents cannot be tamed and should be employed for the universal good of mankind. With these scripts, I attempt to instigate thought, provoke reflections and educe action. 


For writers, I wish to encourage us to document our thoughts as Africans. We erroneously say that Africans don’t like reading, but my humble submission is that we need more literature relevant to us as well, and therein lies my passion to see more African writers come after the generation of the Achibes, Sutherlands, Soyinkas and Ataa Aidoos. We need more African writers, writing our own African stories, for our African readers. There is so much we need to do, and the time to begin was yesterday. My wish is that I can contribute to this renaissance and to the rejuvenation of the African spirit to excellence. Ours is an amazing continent full of resources – both in the ground and in our minds, and may we harness them all to our benefit. Viva Africa!


IMAG: Thanks for your time Nana and I hope you don't stop writing.


NAD: Many thanks too Nana Fredua, for this interview and generally for your ardent support in promoting African literature. I enjoyed this interview and no way, I am hooked onto writing till my last breath. Perhaps, I will even be sending dispatches from heaven!

Read my review of Nana Awere Damoah's second book 'Through the Gates of Thought' here...

Friday, July 02, 2010

30. My Thoughts on "Through the Gates of Thoughts"


Title: Through the Gates of Thought
Genre: Non-Fiction (Inspirational)
Publishers: Athena Press, London
Pages: 134 (e-copy)
Year of Publication: 2010
Country: Ghana

Through the Gates of Thought is a book of inspiration written by a Chemical Engineer whose passion for the arts has seen his works published in different media and collections. Nana Awere Damoah's second book, took me by surprise. When I first got the e-copy for review, I read the first chapter, referred to in the book as Gate 1 and nearly gave up continuing. I thought it was full of reminiscences and I am not one to brood over past events. However, I opened it again yesterday and read the Gate 2 and after the first two paragraphs I was hooked and I completed reading it in less than two hours. Whilst reading it I was encouraged to take two bold steps and one has bore fruits this morning. I had wanted to tell my boss that I don't feel involved in the research process and I would want to learn more as I have decided on pursuing a PhD sometime soon. Reading his book, I realised that I needed to take matters into my own hands, that if I don't move this thought forward, if I don't realise it or sow this seed by telling him what I have in mind he would not know or come to understand it (as he, my boss, is not telepathic to read my mind) and while doing so I needed to exercise tactfulness and circumspection in my writing. I did it and today the news I got from him was 'EXCELLENT, that's good news'. 

This is the sort of inspiration that Nana's work provides. It is practical. The book could be classified into three parts, though these are not distinct: Motivational, Reflections and Problem Solving. The Motivational pieces don't just state abstract things that you must do in order to achieve success but it gives you practical things that others have done and sometimes, that the author himself has done or gone through, which has the ability to lead one to success. Most of the chapters end with an activity that test where you stand on an issue or that try to encourage you to take a second look at yourself. Besides, there are a lot of aphorisms, quotes, proverbs related to the topic that is being discussed. The use of local stories, stories from the Bible and stories from many other sources make it easy for one to relate to it. For instance, most of us have been to the secondary school and have been bullied and humiliated. But how do you solve a problem that you have created and which, according to all, could lead to your dismissal? Through this story, one learns that the cause of the problem is not different from its solution and that with controlled emotions one can solve almost every problem.

To summarise some of the topics in the Gates (or Chapters): Gate 4 encourages us to put words into actions; Gate 5 inspires the youth to act young, and start now for procrastination does not help anyone except perhaps time itself. Gate 6 tells us that time waits for no one and Gate 9, never act in anger. My favourite topic is 'The Ghanaian @ 52'. Here interesting questions are posed; pertinent issues are raised and I hope every person the world over (not only Ghanaians) would, at least, read this Gate, Gate 15 that is. Whereas Nana praises the Ghanaian @ 52 (that is 52 years after independence) as being politically in tune and ability to vote for different political parties for presidential and parliamentary elections, he does not mince words about the way some Ghanaians @ 52 still see politics in the 'way ants walk'. There are other social issues raised in this chapter such as:
The Ghanaian @ 52 is still not sanitation-conscious. (S)he still throws rubbish out of the taxi (s)he is travelling in. (S)he dumps waste into the drain in front of his/her house, ... (S)he expects the Accra Metropolitan Authority (AMA) and the Kumasi Metropolitan Authority (KMA) to sort out her/his indiscriminate littering. (page 79, electronic copy).
And this observation couldn't have come at an opportune time as the infamous June/July floods have started washing away houses, properties, roads and bridges and the death toll has been escalating with it. Here, Nana tells us that we are or should be responsible for our actions; that one cannot expect to have a mosquito-free environment if one keeps dumping waste into gutters; one cannot expect the gutters to clean themselves or better still the floods to find their own appropriate course when it rains if we keep dumping the waste into the gutters, for 'action and reaction are always equal and opposite', aren't they?

Though the subject of politics was talked about, the book is not political as it deals with issues rather than personalities, as has become the new order for our radio stations. The subjects of the book deal with the substance that we all should be talking about. He is an observant and the words in this book have been talked about over and over again but the difference is that he has recorded it and has provided solutions to these problems, the Problem Solving part of the book. Let me be quick to say that, this PS part is not separate in itself for every issue raised is solved by itself. 

Interspersed with these writings are poems written with the motive to inspire. Though I love the pieces and they are inspirational, I think that he strove for a particular poetic device that I would wish he did away with, rhyming. Yet, the latter did nothing to dilute the content of the book, if anything at all, it probably provided a touch of variety as the poetry pieces were strategically placed in the book.

Nana's books have always targeted our mind and, hence, our thoughts. He feels and knows that by attacking the mind, and by so doing our thoughts, the attitudinal problems that have become the bane to development in Ghana would be overcome. For almost all the problems raised in this book are character and attitude base. Thus, it is no wonder that his first book was titled Excursions in my Mind. We need a mental revolution to change the course of our development.

Nana's writing is simple, devoid of dictionary-grabbing words, and written is such a way that every person with a minimal level of education would be able to read and understand and with this the book has a possibility of reaching people far and wide. 
It has been said that in a typical African country of two PhD holders, one is the president and the other is in exile. (page 123, Gate 24, Pro Patria, For the Sake of Africa).
With this quote from the book, I urge all individuals to get a copy, read and act according to its dictates. Nothing in it would lead you astray. I love this book as it has already helped me. Enjoy it. 

Nana contributed a story, Truth Floats, to the first edition African Roar, a collection of Short Stories published by StoryTime, a registered e-zine.

Look out for my interview with the author, Nana Awere Damoah, in the coming days.

ImageNations Rating: 5.0 out of 6.0

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Today's Stories: Nana Awere Damoah and Nii Ayi Parkes

 Nana Awere Damoah
Nana Awere Damoah, the author of Excursions in My Mind, has published his latest book titled 'Through the Gates of Thought'. This book is a collection of stories, aphorisms, poetry and articles. Nana's literary exploit has taken him far and wide and his story 'Truth Floats' also appeared in the maiden edition of StoryTime's anthology African Roar

Nana receives his education in both Ghana and the UK. He is a chemical engineer at Unilever and still finds time to write. He is a family man whose closeness to his family led him to dedicate a whole blog just for his children. Through the Gates of Thought promises to be an interesting read. I would be interviewing the engineer, father, writer, author and man of virtues soon on this blog.

This new book is available on the world wide web through amazon.com click here to purchase...

Nii Ayikwei Parkes
Nii Ayikwei Parkes's poem ballast: a remix is one of the six shortlisted poems from over 150 entries gunning for The Michael Marks Awards for Poetry Pamphlets. 

According to NAP he comes from Ghana and writes poetry, short stories, articles, songs and, sometimes, rap for all ages. 

In its second year the award celebrates the importance of the pamphlet form in introducing new poetry to readers in the internet age. Read about the award here.
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Njoroge, Kihika, & Kamiti: Epochs of African Literature, A Reader's Perspective

Source Though Achebe's Things Fall Apart   (1958) is often cited and used as the beginning of the modern African novel written in E...