Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Linda Ikeji's It Takes You - Sales Outlets



Now you can get Linda Ikeji's It Takes You at the following Sales Outlets in Lagos, Nigeria.


* The HUB Media Store @ The Palms, Lekki, Lagos.
* Silverbird Lifestyle @ Silverbird Galleria, Ahmadu Bello Way, V/I
* Bookworm @ Sweet Sensation building, 233, Adeola Odeku, V/I
* Glendora Bookshop @ Falomo Shopping Complex, Falomo, Ikoyi
* Terra Culture Bookstore @ Tiamiyu Savage, V/I.

Please go get a copy. Thank you!



The Five Languages of Apology in Relationship




The following article was written by New York Times best-selling author Gary Chapman and counselor Jennifer Thomas and will solve many problems for many couples and lovers.

Many people do not know how to admit their ofences and say I am sorry.

They will cheat and will never repent.
They will hurt their wife and will never show regret.

They will rather grumble than be humble.
But the more you grumble the more you will continue to stumble.

I want to share it with you.


The Five Languages of Apology





We are experts at wronging each other, but when it comes to setting things right, we all could use some help. New York Times best-selling author Gary Chapman teams with counselor Jennifer Thomas in an eye-opening study of one of the most important yet least understood pillars of human relationships: the apology. Surprisingly, saying “I’m sorry,” isn’t primarily a matter of will—it’s a matter of how.

Expressing Regret

“Expressing Regret” is the Apology Language that zeroes in on emotional hurt. It is an admission of guilt and shame for causing pain to another person. For those who listen for “Expressing Regret” apologies, a simple “I’m sorry” is all they look for. There is no need for explanation or “pay back” provided the apology has truly come from the heart. “Expressing Regret” is a powerful Apology Language because it gets right to the point. It doesn’t make excuses or attempt to deflect blame. Above all, “Expressing Regret” takes ownership of the wrong. For that reason, “Expressing Regret” is understood as a sincere commitment to repair and rebuild the relationship. The “Expressing Regret” Apology Language speaks most clearly when the person offering the apology reflects sincerity not only verbally, but also through body language. Unflinching eye contact and a gentle, but firm touch are two ways that body language can underscore sincerity.

Accept Responsibility

It is very difficult for some people to admit that they’re wrong. It makes them doubt their self-worth, and no one likes to be portrayed as a failure. However, as adults, we must all admit that we are sinners and that we will make mistakes. We are going to make poor decisions that hurt our mates, and we are going to have to admit that we were wrong. We have to accept responsibility for our own failures. For many individuals, all they want is to hear the words, “I am wrong.” If the apology neglects accepting responsibility for their actions, many partners will not feel as though the apology was meaningful and sincere. Many partners need to learn how to overcome their ego, the desire to not be viewed as a failure, and simply admit that their actions were wrong. For a mate who speaks this apology language, if an apology does not admit fault, it is not worth hearing. Being sincere in your apology means allowing yourself to be weak, and admitting that you make mistakes. Though this may be hard to do for some people, it makes a world of a difference to your partner who speaks this language.

Make Restitution

In our society, many people believe that wrong acts demand justice. The one who commits the crime should pay for their wrongdoing. A mate who speaks this love language feels the same way towards apologies. They believe that in order to be sincere, the person who is apologizing should justify their actions. The mate who’s been hurt simply wants to hear that their mate still loves them.

There are many effective ways to demonstrate sincerity in an apology. Each mate must learn the other’s love language in order to complete the act of restitution. Though some mates may feel a though all is forgotten with a bouquet of flowers, that may not necessarily work for all mates. Every mate should uncover what their partner’s main love language is (Words of Affirmation, Quality Time, Acts of Service, Physical Touch, and Receiving Gifts) and use that specific language in order to make restitutions in the most effective way.

For a mate whose primary apology language is making restitutions, no matter how often you say “I’m sorry”, or “I was wrong”, your mate will never find the apology sincere. You must show strong efforts for making amends. A genuine apology will be accompanied by the assurance that you still love your mate 
and have a desire to right the wrong-doings committed.

Genuinely Repent

For some individuals, repentance is the convincing factor in an apology. Some mates will doubt the sincerity of an apology if it is not accompanied by their partner’s desire to modify their behavior to avoid 
the situation in the future.

It’s important to remember that all true repentance begins in the heart. A mate must feel poorly for hurting their loved one, and rely on God’s help in order to truly change. Admitting you are wrong creates vulnerability. It allows your mate to get a glimpse of your heart. The glimpse of true self is assurance that the apology was sincere.

One important aspect of genuinely repenting is verbalizing your desire to change. Your mate cannot read your mind. Though you may be trying to change inside, if you do not verbalize your desire to change to your mate, most likely they will still be hurt.

Many people have problems with repenting when they do not feel as though their actions were morally wrong. However, in a healthy relationship, we often make changes that have nothing to do with morality and everything to do with building a harmonious marriage.

It is also important to make a dedicated plan for change. Often apologies involving repentance fail because the person never set up steps of action to help ensure success. A person must first set goals for their change. After you create realistic goals, then you can start implementing a plan to change. Taking baby steps towards repentance instead of insisting on changing all at once will increase your chances of successfully changing your ways.

It is important to remember that change is hard. Constructive change does not mean we will immediately be successful. There will be highs and lows on the road to change. You must remember that with God’s help, anyone can change their ways if they are truly and genuinely ready to repent.

Request Forgiveness

In some relationships, a mate wants to hear their partner physically ask for forgiveness. They want assurance that their mate recognizes the need for forgiveness. By asking forgiveness for their actions, a partner is really asking their mate to still love them. Requesting forgiveness assures your mate that you want to see the relationship fully restored. It also proves to your mate that you are sincerely sorry for what you’ve done. It shows that you realize you’ve done something wrong. Requesting forgiveness also shows that you are willing to put the future of the relationship in the hands of the offended mate. You are leaving the final decision up to your partner – to forgive or not forgive.

Requesting forgiveness is not easy. It often leaves one vulnerable to the fear of rejection. Along with the fear of rejection is the fear of failing. Many people have a hard time seeking forgiveness because it means admitting that you have failed. The only way to overcome this fear is to recognize that it is very common amongst mankind. The commonality makes it okay to be a failure. It allows a stubborn mate to apologize to their partner and become a healthy individual.

Ultimately, it’s important to remember that there is a difference between asking for forgiveness and DEMANDING forgiveness. When we demand forgiveness, we tend to forget the nature of forgiveness. Forgiveness is a choice the offended party is supposed to make. Demanding forgiveness takes away the sincerity of asking for it.

Remember not to treat forgiveness lightly. It is something to be cherished and appreciated. The act of forgiveness is hard on both ends – for the person who’s asking and for the person who’s accepting.

More




The 5 Love Languages: The Secret to Love That Lasts ~ Gary Chapman

The Five Love Languages of Children ~ Gary Chapman

The Marriage You've Always Wanted ~ Gary Chapman

The Five Love Languages Singles Edition ~ Gary Chapman

The Heart of the Five Love Languages ~ Gary Chapman

Anger: Handling a Powerful Emotion in a Healthy Way ~ Gary Chapman

Desperate Marriages: Moving Toward Hope and Healing in Your Relationship ~ Gary Chapman

The Four Seasons of Marriage ~ Gary Chapman

Everybody Wins: The Chapman Guide to Solving Conflicts without Arguing (Chapman Guides) ~ Gary Chapman


Hope For the Separated: Wounded Marriages Can Be Healed (Chapman, Gary) ~ Gary Chapman



Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Video: Who Will Be Interested in Reading My Book?





Foyles Top 10 e-Books

Foyles Top 10 e-Books

1. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak (Doubleday/Transworld)
2. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (Fourth Estate)
3. The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown (Bantam Press)
4. Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster (Faber)
5. An Utterly Impartial History of Britain by John O'Farrell (Black Swan)
6. Life of Pi by Yann Martel (Canongate)
7. Making Money by Terry Pratchett (Doubleday)
8. The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett (Corgi)
9. Train to Trieste by Domnica Radulescu (Black Swan)
10. To Heaven by Water by Justin Cartwright (Bloomsbury)



Friday, June 25, 2010

New Michael Jackson Book by Legendary Concert Promoter Leonard Rowe Published to eBook by FastPencil



25 Jun 2010 18:13 Africa/Lagos

Fraud, corruption and manipulation surrounds the death of Michael Jackson. He was loved by the world, but used by some who wanted one thing and one thing only... to profit from his death. And now, one year after the death of The King of Pop, a close friend and legendary concert promoter, Leonard Rowe, tells it all in a bombshell new book.

This book is an eye opening, page turner that reveals the truth about all of the corruption, conspiracy and greed behind Michael’s death--- and it will make the public aware of what really goes on behind the curtain...

New Michael Jackson Book by Legendary Concert Promoter Leonard Rowe Published to eBook by FastPencil

'What Really Happened to Michael Jackson, the King of Pop: The Evil Side of the Entertainment Industry' Chronicles Unseemly Circumstances Around Michael Jackson's Death

CAMPBELL, Calif., June 25 /PRNewswire/ -- FastPencil and Leonard Rowe today announced the availability of Rowe's book, "What Really Happened to Michael Jackson, the King of Pop: The Evil Side of the Entertainment Industry." Rowe, a legendary concert promoter and longtime friend of Michael Jackson and the Jackson family, selected FastPencil to publish the eBook version available for iPad, Kindle and all major eReaders.

"This is a story that must be told. It is a first hand account of the conspiracy and the power of the entertainment industry and I am so glad to be releasing the book on the anniversary of Michael's death," said Leonard Rowe. "It is a raw and eye-opening account of the perils of fame and about the man everyone knew as the 'King of Pop,' but whom I knew as a dear friend."

"What Really Happened to Michael Jackson, the King of Pop: The Evil Side of the Entertainment Industry" chronicles Michael Jackson and the Jackson's rise to fame, the corruption, the endless media frenzy that surrounded him and what ultimately contributed to his untimely death. Rowe provides personal and intimate anecdotes and experiences from his 30-year relationship with the Jackson family.

In the book, Rowe, who was with Michael just a few days before he passed, writes that he believes there was a conspiracy behind the murder of Michael Jackson relating to his 50 percent ownership of the entire Sony catalogue, which is now worth billions of dollars.

The book is now available at FastPencil.com and WhatReallyHappenedToMJ.com.

"FastPencil is honored to have Mr. Rowe select us as a vehicle to share his story," said Steve Wilson, CEO of FastPencil. "With Mr. Rowe's in-depth and personal analysis of Michael Jackson and the Jacksons, we get a rare glimpse in to what goes on behind the scenes of the entertainment industry and insight into what happened to a legend."

Next-generation publisher FastPencil provides authors such as Rowe with an end-to-end solution that strips out the cost and complexity of traditional publishing. By blending social media, marketing, production and distribution, authors can sell more books and maintain complete control of their content creation, price, distribution decisions and sales activity every step of the way. FastPencil's relationships with thousands of book and eBook retailers ensure that each book published is available to the broadest possible audience.

Pricing and Availability

"What Really Happened to Michael Jackson, the King of Pop: The Evil Side of the Entertainment Industry" is available for purchase in print for $21.95 or as an eBook for $9.99 at FastPencil.com and WhatReallyHappenedToMJ.com.

About Leonard Rowe

Legendary concert promoter and close friend to Michael Jackson, Leonard Rowe began working with Michael and the Jackson family in 1979-80. He is the first and only African American concert promoter to organize and promote an international concert tour with Michael Jackson and "The Jacksons." The tour, "Off the Wall," was extremely successful and catapulted Michael's solo career. Rowe has continued his relationship with the Jackson family for the past 30-plus years.

Rowe, who was with Michael a few days before his death, was hired by Michael Jackson to oversee his business and financial affairs during the scheduled London concert tour, "This Is It."

About FastPencil

FastPencil is leveraging the disruptive trends of self-publishing, social media, print-on-demand and eBook distribution to deliver a new unified online service that streamlines the book publishing process offering more control and higher margins for authors. The FastPencil writing and publishing service enables authors to create books online, collaborate, publish and distribute from one engaging, simple, cost-effective solution. For more information please visit FastPencil.com.

For regular FastPencil updates follow us at www.Twitter.com/FastPencil
Become a Fan on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/FastPencil

FastPencil is a registered trademark of FastPencil, Inc. All other
registered or unregistered trademarks are the sole property of their
respective owners.

Media Contact:
Seana Norvell
FortyThree, Inc.
831.401.3175
FastPencil@fortythreepr.com

Source: FastPencil

CONTACT: Seana Norvell of FortyThree, Inc., +1-831-401-3175,
FastPencil@fortythreepr.com, for FastPencil

Web Site: http://www.fastpencil.com/

http://www.whatreallyhappenedtomj.com/

Highly Recommended:


Jacko, His Rise and Fall, Second Edition: The Social and Sexual History of Michael Jackson ~ Darwin Porter

Michael Jackson Death: What Really Happened ~ Danny Klein

Too Much Chlorine to the Brain: A Math - Comedy Memoir ~ Helene Nehrebecki


Releases displayed in Africa/Lagos time
25 Jun 2010
18:13
New Michael Jackson Book by Legendary Concert Promoter Leonard Rowe Published to eBook by FastPencil
13:05
Author Solutions, Inc.'s Keith Ogorek to Speak at the 2010 American Library Association Annual Conference
13:00
The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY) Nominates RIF for 2011 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award (ALMA)
12:45
New Spirituality Book Presents Christian Principles in Easy-to-Understand Format
24 Jun 2010
21:05
Borders® Is Exclusive Retailer for '16 Wishes' to Air on Disney Channel; Merchandise Hits Borders Stores Tomorrow, June 25
19:30
The Onion Adds Another Layer
19:00
Global Stevia Institute Debuts With Distinguished Advisory Board, Expert Panel and Educational Website
18:54
Accessible Archives© Establishes New Subsidiary: Accessible Preservatives©
17:19
CommuniTech, LLC Launches Marketing Blog Site
16:40
Blurb to Publish Mary Tillman's Boots on the Ground By Dusk in Paperback
15:50
The Library of Congress 'Books' Signiant to Help Preserve Rare American Heritage Artifacts and Online Tweets
15:48
S&P 500 First Quarter Buybacks Rebound 80%; Remain 76% Off Historical High
14:00
SDL Named Top Web Engagement Management Provider
14:00
BODY WORLDS Extends Run in Denver Through August 15
13:30
79-Year-Old Cancer Survivor Shares the Recipes that Helped Her Defeat and Stay Cancer-Free for Nearly 40 Years in New Book, Triumph Over Cancer - My Recipes for Recovery
13:15
AuthorHouse Re-Releases 12 Classic Harold Robbins Novels
12:50
New Book Does for Widows What Movie 'It's Complicated' Did for Divorcees
12:45
iUniverse Presents 'Blood Flowers': A Novel
10:30
Publishing With Today's New Tool Set One Author-Publisher's New Media Foray
23 Jun 2010
22:09
Scott O'Grady, Deputy Director of Strong America Now, to Speak at Iowa Republican Convention



Thursday, June 24, 2010

New Book Does for Widows What Movie 'It's Complicated' Did for Divorcees

24 Jun 2010 12:50 Africa/Lagos

New Book Does for Widows What Movie 'It's Complicated' Did for Divorcees

ATLANTA, June 24 /PRNewswire/ -- Baby boomer and author Barbara Barth is not your traditional widow but a gal who is determined to become Super Widow with a little help from her friends, a vintage Corvette, the online dating services, advice from the spiritual world, a pack of dogs and a few margaritas.


A collection of candid essays on finding joy again after the loss of a mate proves no subject is taboo. From dealing with the funeral home (Can I show you our upgraded cremation package? I looked at Miss Death: Was I booking a vacation?) to dating again (He ran in the door, looked at me and said "I've left something in my car." He never returned). Sprinkle in a bevy of rescue dogs (Finally a good night's sleep with someone new in my bed) and those questions you hate to ask (Condoms anyone?). "The Unfaithful Widow" will steal a piece of your heart, tickle your ribs and make you feel good to be alive.


"This has got be one of the best books I have read. It is also one of the hardest books I have read ... because it was so good. Subtitled 'Fragmented Memoirs Of My First Year Alone' each chapter describes exactly that, a fragment of life. Like flipping through a photo album and getting pieces of a person's story. I laughed when she laughed. I cried when she cried. Barbara lays it all bare. Literally, because I even know how many bras she owns, and the style of panties she prefers ...." -- book review by Silver & Grace, Canada


"This book is not just for females. It's a book for anyone who might benefit from inspiration to keep going. It's also for everyone who likes dogs and soft-core dirty talk. Barbara Barth is a master (mistress?) storyteller, with an uncanny ability to recall or recreate dialog. She is able to pluck humor from sadness. She shows proper respect for the past without being a prisoner of the past. Barbara demonstrates impressive resilience, strength and the ability to keep looking ahead despite widowhood, bad dates, and the death of a dog. Her unwillingness to accept cliche roles dictated by age, custom or gender are important lessons for everyone. This book was a lot of fun ...." -- review by author Michael Marcus, "Stories I'd Tell My Children"


Barth has written a memoir that reads like she is talking directly to you. It is a good read for the beach with its snappy pace. This is her first book. Previously she owned and published a hobby newsletter, "RAGS."


She has partnered with Animal Action Rescue for a book signing silent auction charity event on June 26th in Atlanta at Heartfield Manor B & B in historic Inman Park.


Visit http://www.barbarabarth.net/ to see how a widow with dogs stays in trouble.


Trade paperback. 246 pages. ISBN-10 1432750755. Available online at Amazon, Kindle, Barnes & Noble.


Review copies are available from the author. Call Barbara Barth, 1.404.326.7306.


This press release was issued through eReleases(R). For more information, visit eReleases Press Release Distribution at http://www.ereleases.com/.


Source: Barbara Barth

CONTACT: Barbara Barth, +1-404-326-7306


Web Site: http://www.barbarabarth.net/



Helen Oyeyemi and other Writers Win Top Awards


Helen Oyeyemi

The highly gited writer Helen Oyeyemi is among the winners of various literary Awards as announced by the prestigious Society of Authors in the UK. She won £3,000 for her latest novel White is for Witching published last November.

The winners in full:

The Elizabeth Longford Prize

Winner: Tristram Hunt received £5,000 for The Frock-Coated Communist – The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels (Allen Lane)

The Travelling Scholarships

Winners: Sam North, Lemn Sissay and Roma Tearne - each received £1,500


The Somerset Maugham Awards

Winners: Jacob Polley, £5,000 for Talk of the Town (Picador); Helen Oyeyemi, £3,000 for White is for Witching (Picador), and Ben Wilson, £2,000 for What Price Liberty? (Faber)


The Olive Cook Award

Winner: Carys Davies received £1,000 for The Quiet
Joint runners-up: Susannah Rickards for The Paperback Macbeth and Simon van Booy for Little Birds


The McKitterick Prize

Winner: Raphael Selbourne received £4,000 for Beauty (Tindal Street Press)


The Betty Trask Prize and Awards

Prize winner: Nadifa Mohamed received £10,000 for Black Mamba Boy (HarperCollins)
Award winners: Evie Wyld received £7,000 for After the Fire, a Still Small Voice (Cape), Jenn Ashworth received £1,500 for A Kind of Intimacy (Arcadia) and Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani received £1,500 for I Do Not Come to You by Chance (Weidenfeld)


Poetry Awards

The Eric Gregory Awards

Winners: Phil Brown, Matthew Gregory, Sarah Howe, Abigail Parry and Ahren Warner – each received £4,000

The Cholmondeley Awards

Winners: Gillian Allnutt, Colette Bryce, Gwyneth Lewis and Deryn Rees-Jones – each received £1,500

From the Bookseller

http://www.thebookseller.com/Prizes


White is for Witching: A Novel ~ Helen Oyeyemi


The Icarus Girl ~ Helen Oyeyemi


The Opposite House ~ Helen Oyeyemi


Pie-Kah ~ Helen Oyeyemi


Biography - Oyeyemi, Helen (1984-): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online ~ Gale Reference Team


Me and my shadow: a remarkable first novel from a young Brit haunts the mind and soul.(Helen Oyeyemi)(Critical Essay): An article from: Black Issues Book Review ~ Nnedi Okorafor-Mbachu


Juniper's Whitening and Victimese (Modern Plays) ~ Helen Oyeyemi







Barack Obama: The Spirit of the American Dream

President Barack Obama


"My book chronicles the foreseen and unforeseen circumstances of the emergence of Barack Obama as a phenomenal African American politician from Chicago and all the important issues he addressed and debated with his political opponents during his melodramatic presidential campaign, nomination and election as the first black President of the United States of America during a turbulent period in the world with millions traumatized by the tragedies of the war on terror in the Middle East, shocking socio-political scandals and dysfunctional economies of the global meltdown.
~ The Author

Amidst political controversy and economic upheaval, Barack Obama and the American Dream offers a powerful collection of commentary that sheds light on what has become of the "American Dream." Author Michael Chima's brutal honesty paints a thought-provoking collage of one of the world's most prominent and influential leaders, impacting audiences young and old, near and far. A must-read for anyone seeking truth amidst the media muck. -- Pamela Guerrieri; literary judge and editor.



Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Book of the Month: The Mandate of MKO Abiola



The Mandate of MKO Abiola
By Adeleke O. Adeyemi
Hardcover Only.

Price: US$25.20

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. – George Santayana CODENAME JUNE 12: MANDATE AND MAYHEM A Tragedy on the Greatest Threat Ever to Nigeria’s Ruling Mafia. And How it was Checked.


ISBN 978-978-37529-4-8
Copyright Adeleke O’ Adeyemi (Standard Copyright License)
Edition First Edition
Publisher Nigerian Times International
Published September 1, 2007
Language English
Pages 59

Binding Hardcover (dust-jacket)
Interior Ink Black & white
Dimensions (cm) 15.2 wide × 22.9 tall


About MKO Abiola

Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola (August 24, 1937 – July 7, 1998), often referred to as M. K. O. Abiola, was a popular Nigerian Yoruba Egba businessman, publisher and politician. He ran for the presidency in 1993, and won, but remained President-Elect till his death, as he was denied his mandate when the election results were annulled by the preceding military president Ibrahim Babangida.



Saturday, June 19, 2010

Tim Gunn of Project Runway Talks About His New Style Book



Tim Gunn of Project Runway shows fashion tips on Hot Model and talks about his new style book and more at Kate Spade. A Celebrity Wire Exclusive.



The Nigerian Fools Who Think They Can Fool God




The Nigerian Fools Who Think They Can Fool God

Critical Commentaries and Essays with Humourous Anecdotes on the Nigerian Society, Focusing on Education, Romance, Marriage, Religion, Politics and other matters.

· Author: Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
· Seller: office_bookshelf
· Rating: (273 ratings) 96% positive over the past 12 months.
· In Stock. Ships from WA, United States. Expedited shipping available. Domestic shipping rates and return policy.



Friday, June 18, 2010

Are You Absolutely, Positively, and Wholeheartedly Ready to Publish Your Novel



Click here for larger image

The dream of every writer who is yet to be published is to be published by the major publishers and not to self-publish. Self-publishing is the last resort in most cases, except you are the “publish or perish” type. But many of the writers with manuscripts or typescripts of unpublished novels may not be really ready to publish, because their works still need to be well written and well edited.
Check out the following.




"Are You Absolutely, Positively, and Wholeheartedly Ready to Publish Your Novel?"

Poster You're done. You've finally finished that soon-to-be Pulitzer, monster of a book, and it's giving you all these warm, fuzzy feelings of satisfaction. But are you really done? Is this really it? After months, years, or decades of careful deliberation over those transitions and subplots, are you totally ready to give your paper child its first true glimpse of sunlight? Don't you want one last double-check of your novel's readiness for publication?

We had a feeling that might be the case. That's why the certified poster specialists at 826 have engineered the Are You Absolutely, Positively, and Wholeheartedly Ready to Publish Your Novel? poster. Meticulously constructed to test every last sentence, this poster is (possibly) scientifically proven to (possibly) supply every writer with the must-have writing checklists, key cornerstones of revision, and ninja writing skills necessary to (possibly) make the ultimate decision of whether or not to publish. (It's also the perfect size for that premier, particularly lonely spot right above your workspace. You know the one.) From charting the mountainous adversity faced by your main character to naming your novel in five easy spins, this poster will (possibly) be the supportive good guy or critical bad guy you need in your literary life to make that final call.

Pick one up for yourself or your favorite writer today! Designed by the oh-so-talented Anna Hurley and screen printed on beautiful French Paper card stock, Are You Absolutely, Positively, and Wholeheartedly Ready to Publish Your Novel? is available in two different color combinations. Prints are 15" x 30" and on sale for $18 plus shipping.

CLICK HERE TO ORDER








Graceland (Today Show Pick January 2005) ~ Christopher Abani


Song for Night: A Novella ~ Christopher Abani


The Virgin of Flames ~ Christopher Abani


Becoming Abigail ~ Christopher Abani


Sanctificum ~ Christopher Abani


Kalakuta Republic ~ Christopher Abani


Hands Washing Water ~ Christopher Abani


Controlled Decay (Black Goat) ~ Gabriela Jauregui


Feed Me the Sun: Collected Long Poems ~ Chris Abani


Daphne's Lot ~ Chris Abani

Tales of Freedom: Ben Okri's Tales of Stokus


Ben Okri


Nigeria’s celebrated literary icon Ben Okri’s The Famished Road has sold over 500, 000 copies since it won the Booker Prize for him in 1991 and rescued him from the jaws of poverty. He has been very prolific with over 8 novels, two collections of his universal poems, plays, essays and other writings making him one of the greatest black writers of all time and the next Nigerian writer most likely to win the Nobel Prize after Wole Soyinka. Okri’s latest novel Tales of Freedom is an experiment in prose and poetry that he called Stokus. But what are stokus?
Ben Okri has the answer.

"The following tales are properly 'stokus'. A stoku is an amalgam of short story and haiku. It is a story as it inclines towards a flash of a moment, insight, vision or paradox," said Okri.




Review

'Tales of Freedom may transport into regions of untold rapture' --Telegraph

'Beautifully distilled pieces of writing that are not without humour...These tiny tales are full of simple, elegant description...These word pictures span a huge range of influences and reference points, from classic literature of the twentieth century back to oral storytelling...Rarely, perhaps, has the love of ideas been expressed as simply and unpretentiously' -- Glasgow Herald

'Moments of genuine poetry and insight'
--Guardian


Book Description

As one of Britain's foremost poets, Ben Okri is rightly acclaimed for his use of language. And as a Booker Prize winning novelist, this skill was shown to particular effect in both "Starbook" (his most recent work) and in "The Famished Road". In "Tales of Freedom", he brings both poetry and story together in a fascinating new form, using writing and image pared down to their essentials, where haiku and story meet. Thus we discover Pinprop, the slave to an old couple lost in a clearing, who holds the keys to the universe in his quirky hands. Then there is the beautifully dressed black Russian on the train, helping to film a new version of 'Eugene Onegin'. Later, in the chaos of the aftermath of war, orphaned children paint mysterious shapes of bulls, birds, hybrid creatures, and we wonder if grief has unhinged them into genius...And who is that woman, who hardly speaks, who presses a tiny flower into the palm of the young boy on the bus, and then leaves his life forever? "Tales of Freedom" offers a haunting necklace of images which flash and sparkle as the light shines on them. Quick and stimulating to read, but slowly burning in the memory, they offer a different, more transcendent way of looking at our extreme, gritty world - and show the wealth of freedom that's available beyond the confines of our usual perceptions.


Birds of Heaven (Phoenix 60p paperbacks) ~ Ben Okri

Tales of Freedom ~ Ben Okri

Astonishing The Gods ~ Ben Okri

Starbook ~ Ben Okri

A Way of Being Free ~ Ben Okri


Incidents at the Shrine ~ Ben Okri

The Famished Road (Vintage Booker) ~ Ben Okri

Infinite Riches (The Famished Road) ~ Ben Okri

Mental Fight ~ Ben Okri

Dangerous Love ~ Ben Okri

Stars of the New Curfew ~ Ben Okri

An African Elegy ~ Ben Okri

In Arcadia ~ Ben Okri





Thursday, June 17, 2010

A Heart to Mend




Reviewed by Lan Thano

A Heart to Mend, a novel recently published by Myne Whitman, is a new addition to the sparsely populated field of Nigerian romance novels. It is the story of Gladys Eborah, a young girl who has recently moved from Enugu to Lagos in search of work after completing her education. It describes how she meets and falls for the successful, yet emotionally distant Edward Bestman, and the turbulent relationship between them as she struggles to deal with his unwillingness to commit to a relationship. The novel also has two sub-plots: one which deals with her attempts to build a relationship with the estranged aunt who she stays with in Lagos, and another which reveals a sinister attempt to sabotage Edward’s business empire and ends up creating a huge rift in his relationship with Gladys.

Myne Whitman


The author immediately engages us in the first chapter by painting a vivid picture of Gladys’ feelings of apprehension on arriving in the busy, bustling city of Lagos. She also quickly sets the stage for the budding romance between Gladys and Edward. Thereafter, she gradually develops the story, and by degrees, we get to see how the relationship between the two protagonists develops. She paints a fuller picture of both characters; we get to see how driven and successful Edward is as she describes his business interests in realistic detail. But we also see conflict in Edward’s mind as he is torn between his desire for Gladys, and the mistrust of people planted in him from earlier experiences of betrayal. Gladys’ evolution from a simple girl new to the city to a young urban professional is also realistically chronicled, as is the turmoil she faces as she is uncertain of Edward’s feelings towards her.

The author also skillfully weaves in the sub plot involving the takeover of Edward’s business interests. It is clear that she has spent a lot of time researching to paint a realistic picture of business practices in the Nigerian financial industry; but what is more compelling is the drama that she conjures up as the identities and motives of the main actors in the takeover become clear, and the relationship between Gladys and Edward is threatened. The other sub plot involving Gladys’ aunt is not as integral to the story, but it does forms an interesting backdrop.

The author has used a writing style that is simple and direct, with lots of descriptive detail. On the one hand, this allows the reader to follow the narrative with ease, at the same time immersing them in the story; on the other, readers who are more interested in the story rather than the setting may find the overly descriptive nature of the prose a distraction. As for the plot, the story is billed as a romance, so there are no prizes for guessing how the story ends. However, it is the journey, not the destination that entertains in this novel, and the author has done a great job of creating a story of two characters who engage our sympathies and who we find wanting to triumph over the odds that are thrown their way.


Title: A HEART TO MEND

Author: Myne Whitman

First Published: December 12, 2009

Copyright: 2009

Page No: 244

ISBN: 978-1-4490-4570-4


Available for purchase

1. AuthorHouse: http://www.authorhouse.com/Bookstore/ItemDetail.aspx?bookid=67912

2. Amazon: http://amazon.com

3. Nigeria, See details at http://www.mynewhitman.com


--
http://www.freado.com/book/5186/A-Heart-to-Mend-Paperback



Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Peter Carey Says People Are Getting Dumber Every Day


Peter Carey

Australian author Peter Carey who has been tipped to become the first to win the Man Booker Prize three times says only dumb people would put cookery books and Dan Brown novels at the top of the most-read charts.

"We are getting dumber every day. We are really, literally, forgetting how to read. We have yet to grasp the fact that consuming cultural junk is completely destructive of democracy," said the 67 years old author of 11 books who lives in New York during a speech to close the 2010 Sydney Writer’s Festival.

Peter Carey has won the Man Booker Prize twice for Oscar and Lucinda (1988) and True History of the Kelly Gang (2001) .

Only Carey and JM Coetzee of South Africa have won the Booker Prize twice.

Nigerian writer Ben Okri remains the youngest author to win the Booker Prize at 32 for his metaphysical novel The Famished Road in 1991.


~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima






Parrot and Olivier in America ~ Peter Carey


Theft ~ Peter Carey


True History of the Kelly Gang: A Novel ~ Peter Carey


His Illegal Self (Vintage International) ~ Peter Carey


My Life as a Fake ~ Peter Carey


Jack Maggs: A Novel ~ Peter Carey


Oscar and Lucinda: movie tie-in edition ~ Ralph Fiennes


Bliss ~ Peter Carey


Illywhacker ~ Peter Carey


Wrong About Japan ~ Peter Carey





Summertime: Fiction ~ J. M. Coetzee


Waiting for the Barbarians: A Novel(Penguin Ink) ~ J. M. Coetzee


Disgrace: A Novel ~ J. M. Coetzee


Boyhood: Scenes From Provincial Life ~ J. M. Coetzee


Life and Times of Michael K: A Novel ~ J. M. Coetzee


Youth: Scenes from Provincial Life II ~ J. M. Coetzee


Age of Iron ~ J. M. Coetzee


Diary of a Bad Year ~ J. M. Coetzee


The Famished Road ~ Ben Okri

In Arcadia ~ Ben Okri

Dangerous Love ~ Ben Okri

Stars of the New Curfew ~ Ben Okri

A Way of Being Free ~ Ben Okri

Songs of Enchantment ~ Ben Okri

Infinite Riches (The Famished Road) ~ Ben Okri

Astonishing the Gods ~ Ben Okri

Tales of Freedom ~ Ben Okri

Starbook ~ Ben Okri

Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani Wins Betty Trask Award


Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani

Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani Wins Betty Trask Award

The literary star at the NEXT newspaper of Nigeria, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani has won the Betty Trask Award for her debut novel I Do Not Come to You by Chance. The awards are given for the best novels by young writers under 35 and who are citizens of the Commonwealth of Nations. Miss Nwaubani’s novel has already won the coveted Commonwealth Writers Prize for the best first book in Africa in 2010.

The Betty Trask Awards were announced at the Society of Authors annual Awards Party in Piccadily, London. The prizes are awarded to both published and unpublished traditional or romantic novels.



~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima




More Literary News and Trivia


Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani at the Rainbow Book Club

Adaobi Nwaubani talks with African Writing Online [many ...


Authors clash over Booker favourite's attack on 'junk'

Franzen and Martel among multitude of authors coming to IFOA

Munro, Atwood on Trillium short list

AN EVENING WITH ELEANOR CATTON, MICHAEL HELM, AND SHAUGHNESSY ...

AN EVENING WITH BEN OKRI

International prize for rural-inspired author

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Was Here


More.


Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Wayo Guy and other Nigerian Short Stories



Wayo Guy and other Nigerian Short Stories ~ Chima Uchendu

This collection of humorous stories will make you laugh and learn; they will make you smile with joy. They are clever hybrids of African and Western stories of adventure, of attempts at deception, of love and affection, and of family and friends; they are told in a unique writing style that elevates the writing itself to classic prose and poetry while the reader is always rewarded with surprise endings.This is Uchendu's second book; his first book, The African Girl, a novel, was published in 1998 (Sungai Books, NJ).


About the Author
Chima Uchendu practices law in Washington, D.C.. He is a former Symposium Editor of The Law Journal at Howard University School of Law where he was an AETNA scholar and received several American Jurisprudence Awards for academic excellence. Uchendu has a unique style of writing, molded from his Nigerian and American experiences. He calls his narrative style Afrosuspense, which he defines as a focus on traditional African flavor and ethnic idioms, delivered through the popular story-telling tradition of engaging literary suspense, in order to arrest the reader's interest with a promise of a surprise ending. This is Uchendu's second book; his first book, The African Girl, a novel, was published in 1998 (Sungai Books, NJ).





New Picture Book Illuminates Differences Between Metaphors and Similes

15 Jun 2010 12:25 Africa/Lagos



New Picture Book Illuminates Differences Between Metaphors and Similes

New Children's Book Reveals Figures of Speech Using Paintings

DUNEDIN, Fla., June 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Learning the different functions of the English language can be challenging, especially for younger children. Yet distinguishing between an adjective and an adverb or a noun and a verb is much easier than making the distinction between a simile and a metaphor. For this task, pictures can provide much-needed clarity.


Claire Janvier Gibeau offers such a teaching tool in her charming children's book, "Similes and Metaphors" (published by AuthorHouse). Combining whimsical illustrations with examples of similes and metaphors, Gibeau's book helps children distinguish between the two figures of speech. The pictures, formatted side-by-side like a comic, compare two unlike things or suggest a likeness.


Students will find many familiar phrases throughout the book. A picture depicting three friends with their arms around each other illustrates the phrase "three peas in a pod" while a man sitting in a comfortable chair in his home library demonstrates the metaphor of a "book worm." Other, less familiar examples include "he's too timid to seek the maiden's hand" and "family teamwork puts the focus on many shoulders, rather than on just one." With such a range of examples, Gibeau's book will introduce children to new concepts and broaden their comprehensive reading and writing skills.


With the publication of "Similes and Metaphors," Gibeau contributes to her series of educational and entertaining books. Her two other books on language include "Homonyms" and "Hyperbole Examples" (also by AuthorHouse). Teachers, parents and homeschoolers will find "Similes and Metaphors" a useful tool for broadening their students' knowledge of the English language.


Claire Janvier Gibeau devotes her time to writing, painting and other creative pursuits. She has taught piano for more than 40 years and has had several piano-teaching pieces published. Gibeau is the author of two novels and several children's books.


AuthorHouse is the premier book publisher for emerging, self-published authors. For more information, please visit http://www.authorhouse.com/.


EDITORS: For review copies or interview requests, contact:

Promotional Services Department
Tel: 888-728-8467
Fax: 812-961-3133
Email: pressreleases@authorhouse.com
(When requesting a review copy, please provide a street address.)



This press release was issued through eReleases(R). For more information, visit eReleases Press Release Distribution at http://www.ereleases.com/.


Source: AuthorHouse

CONTACT: Promotional Services Department, +1-888-728-8467, Fax:
+1-812-961-3133, pressreleases@authorhouse.com


Web Site: http://www.authorhouse.com/

Recommended Books


Children ~ John W. Santrock

Children ~ John W. Santrock

Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes (Baby Board Books) ~ Annie Kubler

Peek-A Who? ~ Nina Laden

What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? (Caldecott Honor Book) ~ Robin Page

The Going-To-Bed Book ~ Sandra Boynton

Where the Wild Things Are ~ Maurice Sendak

Moo Baa La La La ~ Sandra



Saturday, June 12, 2010

Helon Habila's Irekefe Island and His Latest Novel



Helon Habila says that telling stories in a non-linear way is in some ways similar to the way the human brain works.

Measuring Time: A Novel ~ Helon Habila

Waiting for An Angel: Fiction ~ Helon Habila

Habila with award winning Canadian novelist Madeleine Thien and the popular Jamaican writer Colin Channer will be mentoring a selection of promising writers in Nigeria at the next Fidelity Bank International Creative Writing Workshop coming up in Abuja from July 16-22, 2010. Click here for more details on how to participate in the workshop and meet Helon Habila live.

The following is an excerpt from his latest short story and the synopsis of his latest novel. Enjoy.


Irekefe Island
~ By Helon Habila

Only subscribers of the Virginia Quarterly Review may read this in its entirety. What follows is a free preview, truncated midway through.

Boma was alone when I got home in the evening, and I could tell she had been crying. I had gone straight to the office to write my report for tomorrow’s paper, my legs still wobbly from standing all afternoon on the ferry. We had made so many stops on the way that I had begun to think we were never going to reach Port Harcourt; we had picked up women carrying chickens in baskets and crabs in buckets and leading squealing goats by ropes around the neck on their way to the market. The air in the ferry’s central lounge soon grew foul, forcing me to abandon my seat next to a fat, laughing, gesticulating woman and her two children to stand outside by the rail, my eyes focused on the receding coastline, my mind contemplating what awaited me in Port Harcourt.

Boma was seated in my wicker armchair, facing the TV, but in such a way that her profile showed the undamaged side of her face, and even when she looked up as I entered she still managed to keep the burnt, badly healed side hidden. She did it unconsciously, but the scar always dictated how she stood, how she sat. It made me sad when she did that. How could I tell her that she really needn’t do that with me? Only with John, her husband, was she ever able to sit without regard to where the light fell. But two months ago John had left her, and now she had taken to stopping by more often, even when I wasn’t around. She’d clean the dishes and cook and sweep the room, but sometimes she just sat and cried.

Today her bags and crockery and TV and other household things were heaped in a corner of my tiny living room.

—The landlord kicked me out.

She lived in a tenement house similar to mine, in a room-and-parlour, owned by the same hard-faced, unsmiling landlord. The landlord had started hanging around outside their door soon after John, who worked as a mail sorter till six months ago when the courier company closed down, had lost his job. Since Boma was only a trainee typist and didn’t receive a salary, I had shared my monthly pay with them, knowing that they had only me to turn to as I had only them. I went to the bathroom and when I came back she stood up and went to the stove and dished out some rice for me.

When the silence grew too heavy, even with the TV on, I told her of the kidnapping, and the devastated island. When I got to the dead bodies, she burst into tears.

—The poor people, they could be anyone, just anyone.

I knew she was thinking of John. He had become very political, hanging out in backstreet barrooms with other unemployed youths to play cards and drink all day, always complaining about the government. He had been full of anger before he left, the kind of anger that often pushed one to blaspheme, or to rob a bank, or to join the militants. I had seen that kind of anger in many of my friends before, people I went to school with; some of them were now in the forests with the fighters, some of them had made millions from ransom money, but a lot of them were dead.

—Boma, John has more sense than that.

John had married her when others had cringed and recoiled at the sight of her red, constantly watery eyes and curdled cheeks. We had grown up together, the three of us; fought the bullies together in primary and secondary school, parting only when I left home, the first time to become a photographer’s apprentice in Port Harcourt, the second time for journalism school in Lagos. At first I thought John had stuck to Boma out of pity, and I resented him for it; I really truly believed only when I saw the exchange of rings, and the joy on my sister’s damaged face.

She slept on the bed and I spread a blanket on my old and tattered carpet in the living room after moving some of her things into the bedroom. Boma went to sleep immediately, but I couldn’t sleep, and when I got sore from endlessly tossing and turning, I turned on the TV and watched a science fiction movie about a submerged world. The polar ice cap has melted and land has sunk under water and is now only talked about in legends. The star is a hated mutant, with gills and webbed feet, and he is clever with contraptions and devices. In one scene he takes the heroine under water in a bell jar and shows her an inundated city. This is it, he tells her, there is no dry land, so quit hoping. There are long and beautiful shots of endless ocean, with only the mariner’s frail boat on it, dwarfed by the liquid blue vastness of the ocean. I fell asleep with the movie still playing, thinking there was something sad about people who were born and lived and died on water, on rusty ships and boats and fantastic balloons, their days and nights filled with the hope of someday finding dirt, their wars and industries and relationships and culture all driven by the myth of dry land.

The Reporter was a moderate, middlebrow daily occupying the two bottom floors in a five floor building in central Port Harcourt. The paper had been in existence for over seven years now, and in that time the staff had grown from twenty to two hundred, the print run from one thousand to over ten thousand. It was owned by Godwin Amaechi, “Chairman” to his employees, a seventy-year-old veteran journalist who still came to the office earlier than everyone else and stayed till 10 p.m. after the next day’s issue had been put to bed. He controlled every aspect of the paper, from its accounts to its editorials, with a dictator’s hand, albeit a benevolent one. I had seen colleagues who were currently out of favor duck into a doorway at his approach; I had seen line editors make a sign of the cross before going into his office for a meeting. At midday, every day except Sundays when he stayed home, he’d carry out what we privately called the “ceremonial inspection of the guards,” starting from the long, rectangular newsroom where he’d accordingly chastise or praise a deserving reporter, and ending up at the dining room on the ground floor an hour later. For the next hour he’d sit at the head of the table, surrounded by editors and other senior staff, each doing his best to outshine the other in suggesting ingenious story ideas. The day’s favorite reporter usually sat to the Chairman’s right at those grim lunches—an honor said to be painful as torture.

Today, for the first time, I was experiencing it. For over an hour I answered the Chairman’s questions, giving as many details as I could, hardly blinking, hardly breathing, mostly swallowing without chewing, gulping down mouthfuls of water to stop myself from choking on my pounded yam. Now I understood why some colleagues called these lunches “The Last Supper.”

—You have done a great job. Good pictures.

—Thank you sir.

—And tell me about Zaq. I understand you were there with him?

He waved the morning paper which carried my article.

—Yes. He was very helpful. He is still out there, on Irikefe Island. He needed the break.

—I knew him, once. We used to work for the same paper. But that was a long time ago.

The kidnapping, which had receded to the inside pages over the past couple of days, had inched back to the front page once again, mainly because of the violent gun battle on the island. Some of the men, like Nkem at the Globe, speculated in their report that Mrs. Floode might be dead, using garish pictures of dead bodies and burning huts to support their speculation. My story, which the Reporter brought out in a special edition, had captured more attention than the other reports, perhaps because I had referenced and quoted Zaq a lot, and also because, due to my training, I knew how to use pictures better than the other reporters. The shrill urgency and tragedy that my text tactfully refrained from mentioning, I used my close-ups to convey with twice the impact. That morning two Reuters reporters, after reading my story, came to the newsroom to chat with me.

After the meal, which I could still feel suspended in a hard lump between my chest and my stomach, I sat in the deserted newsroom to recover. Most of the reporters were out on their beats and would only start trickling in late in the afternoon to write down their pieces for tomorrow. When I felt the strength return to my legs, I stood up and crossed over to the editor’s office. I found him seated behind his desk, the fan in the corner focused directly at his face, his tie loosened, exposing his lumpy neck, a toothpick stuck between his lips.

—Ah, here comes our star reporter. When are you going to see the husband?

—Right now. He is expecting me. I just came in to let you know . . .

—Go, go. Make sure you get a good interview.

—Well, he said no interviews, till after everything is over.

—Well, once it is over then it is over, isn’t it? Anyway, go get whatever you can out of him, then take the rest of the day off. Come back early on Monday and we’ll find a nice exciting assignment for you.

He stood up and shook my hand. His behavior toward me had dramatically changed since I’d returned from Irikefe.

—The Chairman is really pleased with you. He thinks you’ll make a good reporter. We shall see.

The Floodes lived in one of the many colonial style buildings on the Port Harcourt waterfront where most of the wealthy expatriate oil workers lived. It was hidden behind a tall, barbed wire-topped wall, and I passed two gates and about a half dozen security men talking to each other on radios before I finally saw Mr. Floode.

I was led in by a uniformed guard. We crossed a huge lawn to the front door, which the guard pushed open without pressing the bell. I followed him into a spacious living room dimly lit by shaded wall lamps, with an ornamental fan turning slowly in the center of the ceiling. We came out through a back door onto the patio where Floode waited, seated on a wicker chair, a cocktail on the glass table in front of him. He waved the guard away, then he stood up and took my hand.

—Thank you for coming, Mr. . . .

—Rufus.

—That is a good name. Is that a common name around here?

—I know a few.

He waved me to a sit.

—I haven’t been here long, you know. This is my second year in the country and I am still trying to understand the place and the people. I think Nigerians are very nice and hospitable . . .

—You think so, even after the kidnapping?

James Floode looked momentarily surprised at my directness, but I wanted to get to the point as quickly as possible. He sighed and his eyes turned dark as he reached forward and picked up his drink. He must have had a few before my arrival; his movement was slow and deliberate, just like his speech. So far he had refused to talk to the media, including his country’s media, apart from a few prepared comments about missing his wife and his hopes that the kidnappers would release her soon. I was aware how important this moment was, even though I was here by default.

—Tell me, are you married, Mr. Rufus?

—No. Please call me Rufus, it is also my first name. No, Mr. Floode. I am not married. I am only twenty-five.

—Call me James. Well, a lot of you chaps do marry rather early, is it not so? A few of the workers I know, very young, but they always talk about their families. Children and all.

—Yes, there are a lot who marry early.

He sighed again and went quiet, as though he had lost interest in that thread of talk.

—Let’s go inside. I’ll show you something.
Continue reading.


Synopsis
From the desks of Nigeria's newsrooms, two journalists are recruited to find the kidnapped wife of a British oil engineer. Zaq, an infamous media hack, knows what's in store, but Rufus, a keen young journalist eager to get himself noticed, has no idea what he's let himself in for.


Journeying into the oil-rich regions of South Africa, where militants rule and the currency dealt in is the lives of hostages, Rufus soon finds himself acting as intermediary between editor, husband, captive and soldier. As he follows the trail of the missing woman, the love for the 'story' becomes about much more than just uncovering her whereabouts, and instead becomes a mission to seek out and expose the truth. In a cruel twist of fate, Rufus finds himself taking on Zaq's role much more literally than he ever anticipated, and in the midst of a seemingly endless, harrowing war, he learns that truth can often be a bitter pill to swallow . . .

Format : Paperback
ISBN: 9780241144862
Size : 135 x 216mm
Pages : 224
Published : 05 Aug 2010
Publisher : Hamish Hamilton