It is my new year. On the first Saturday of this month I
turned 65. Nothing new in that as one day looks very much like another eh? For
me though, birthdays are markers and I have a habit of looking forward to them.
You know, do reviews and previews of my the past months and years sometimes. It
was special for me this year because I had a chance to formally unveil to my
own circle of friends my book two of the Numen Yeye series. Rose of Numen had
been releases a couple of weeks before then.
I am using the instrument of fiction and facts to tell my
people a story, and it is with a longing that we will dispense with the false façade
we give the world. We are Nigerians, and I know that deeply ingrained in every
Nigerian is a search for the Truth.
Why did I start these Numen series?
I spent my early years in the Northern part of my great
country. I was used to walking wide open spaces in the blistering sun , the
wild windy storms that will stop as abruptly as it had started.. We lived in
Kaduna and I spoke the Hausa language instinctively with family and friends. I
listened to tales of the dark south as I heard tales of rituals, dark medicine
and held the southern peoples specifically my Yoruba homeland in dread.
When my policeman father was transferred South, we
thought we had received a veritable death sentence. I had a sense of being
closed in. Then I met my maternal grandmother and heard a story that opened a
love for my tribe, a questioning of the very things that had kept me
frightened. She was a priestess, a love and mystic that in the very simplicity
of her life showed I had nothing to be afraid of. She told me about the
pantheon of the gods of my ancestors and how it is I could find the same in any
particular religion in any particular part of the planet Earth. Above all,
these gods in a single thread led straight to Olodumare, the Supreme One.
So I wrote the Numen Yeye series first as a play, in the
same trilogy as I later did in prose.
Last Saturday, I presented to my own community of friends
and fellow authors, the second in the series…ROSE OF NUMEN.
Let me share one of the comments of Lloyd Weaver an African-American,
when I gave him the book to read before coming to the presentation:
Lloyd Weaver presnting Rose of Numen |
” I am
totally stunned. There is nothing more to be said. I thank the Mother of All..
You have put your soul on the line and rendered your life sacred.” Quite heavy
words for me but I understood what he meant for Lloyd is an Ifa priest of a
reputation that earned him a chieftaincy title from the accepted cradle of
Yoruba land, Ile Ife. I felt excited when he came to the launching and spoke
glowingly about the book. His comments underlined the comments of the book
reviewer, a head of the department of literature, Dr. Sola Owonibi.
Dr. Owonibi, the book reviewer |
In the words of Dr. Owonibi, “I am a teacher of
Literature, I should know about Literature and with all sense of responsibility,
the book Rose of Numen, is a great work of Literature. It is a great work of
literature, a book that I am proud to recommend to anyone. I congratulate the
author on a well written book and the publishers for a great cover and layout.”
I felt like I was floating on a cloud and listening to
accolades for someone else.
I will continue next week . I hope you will order
for your own copy.
You can buy a copy from ifwgpublishing.com
Or at amazon.com
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