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Chibundu onuzo welcome to lagos
Chibundu onuzo welcome to lagos










chibundu onuzo welcome to lagos chibundu onuzo welcome to lagos

Onuzo’s novel is at once a Robin Hood tale and a cross section of Nigerian society, and though she takes on a lot in terms of both themes and characters, she shepherds it along smoothly. (Chike’s brief stint directing traffic is at once comic and scarifying.) Fineboy stumbles across what seems to be an abandoned furnished apartment, but they’re actually squatting in the home of Sandayo, a former education secretary who’s stolen funds in hopes the money will go directly to schools instead of being squandered by bureaucrats. Together they travel to Lagos, which is hard on newcomers with limited means: The only shelter they can afford is in a camp town under a bridge, and the quintet can only piece together side hustles. But Yemi, one of the privates under his command, wants out, too together, they soon meet Fineboy, another deserter then Isoken, a young woman who’ll be raped if left with her family then Oma, who's escaping her abusive husband. When Chike decides to desert the Nigerian army, unable to abide its violence against innocent citizens, he plans to travel light. A ragtag group of refugees from war, corruption, and domestic violence attempts to resettle in Nigeria’s chaotic capital in Onuzo’s second novel ( The Spider King’s Daughter, 2012).












Chibundu onuzo welcome to lagos