Books
These stories do not try to explain a whole country. They stay close to a few lives at a time, tracing how big forces — climate, politics, faith, migration — press against ordinary households.
Beneath an old ugba tree, village arguments about faith and superstition collide with a harsher reality: the seasons are shifting, yields are falling, and no miracle has arrived to fix it.
As elders and a charismatic pastor push to cut the tree down, a young villager finds himself defending more than wood and leaves. He is defending the right to imagine a different kind of future.
Themes: climate justice, tradition, fear, youth activism, community memory.
John, a 24-year-old African who has just arrived in Europe, is supposed to be the family success story. Instead he finds himself counting coins, hiding disappointments and inventing new versions of his life on every phone call home.
When an unexpected opportunity appears, it demands a payment he never imagined he could consider. The choice he makes haunts every relationship that follows.
Themes: migration, expectation, guilt, money, mental strain, belonging.
Next projects
Alongside these novels, other full-length manuscripts are in progress. They continue to follow people at the edges of policy, headlines and statistics — where decisions feel personal long before they look political.