Blog about Art, Poetry and Prose

Blog about Art, Poetry and Prose

Thursday, July 5, 2018

FAR AWAY



Last night I saw the stars falling
I could not help but ponder why
It has been long I felt your touch
The feeling of being loved
I have got no where else to go
Except by your side
The cloud may be full of hope
It does not stop tears falling from the sky
If life is hanging on a tiny thread
I will wrap you around my heart
If the wind sweeps you far away
I will patiently be waiting for you

All Rights Reserved © Akan Udofia 2018

FAITH IS THE WAY



No child is not conceived
Free from the sins of our forefathers
The world since it conception
Witness the presence of God

Life is entrusted with souls
Yet star's are falling from the sky
Hope is perishing, love waxing cold
The human mind enslaved

To vanity and fragile misconception
Lingering in the debt of the heart
No one deserves to struggle
No one deserves to experience pain

The world is created in richness
But man is not satisfy 
God's plans for man is infinite
But man lack the will to ask

In the mountain and valley
God's glory abound
To unlock the key to profound greatness
The mind need be upright

All Rights Reserved © Akan Udofia 2018

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Wins 10th PEN Pinter Prize


African Authors Bringing Diverse Narratives to Literature


More than a decade ago, when the young Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was struggling to get her first novel, Purple Hibiscus, published, an agent told her that things would be easier “if only you were Indian,” because Indian writers were in vogue. Another suggested changing the setting from Nigeria to America. Adichie didn’t take this as commentary on her work, she said, but on the timidity of the publishing world when it came to unknown writers and unfamiliar cultures, especially African ones.
These days she wouldn’t receive that kind of advice. Black literary writers with African roots (though some grew up elsewhere), mostly young cosmopolitans who write in English, are making a splash in the book world, especially in the United States. They are on best-seller lists, garner high profile reviews and win major awards in America and in Britain. Adichie, 36, the author of Americanah, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction this year, is a prominent member of an expanding group that includes Dinaw Mengestu, Helen Oyeyemi, NoViolet Bulawayo, Teju Cole, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor and Taiye Selasi, among others.
There are reasons for the critical mass now, say writers, publishers and literature scholars. After years of political and social turmoil, positive changes in several African nations are helping to greatly expand the number of writers and readers. Newer awards like the Caine Prize for African Writing have helped, too, as have social media, the Internet and top M.F.A. programs. At the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, black writers with recent African roots will make up more than 10 percent of the fiction students come September. Moreover, the number of African immigrants in the United States has more than quadrupled in the past two decades, to almost 1.7 million.
And publishing follows trends: Women, Asian-American, Indian and Latino writers have all been “discovered” and had their moment in the sun — as have African-Americans, some of whom envy the attention given to writers with more recent links in Africa.