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Same format as ever - choose a book (doesn't have to be from the list), turn up and tell us about it. The following is a list of suggestions if folk don't have time to do any detective work:

## 1. Chinua Achebe

Why important: Often considered the founding figure of modern African literature in English; his work reshaped global perceptions of African history and colonialism.
What his work is like:
Clear, restrained prose with strong oral storytelling influences; examines the collision between Igbo culture and colonial modernity.
Representative titles

  • Things Fall Apart (1958)
  • No Longer at Ease (1960)
  • Arrow of God (1964)

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## 2. Wole Soyinka

Why important: Nobel Prize in Literature (1986), the first African laureate; hugely influential across drama, essays, and fiction.
What his work is like:
Intellectually dense, mythic, and politically engaged; often draws on Yoruba cosmology and philosophical questions about power.
Representative titles

  • The Interpreters (1965)
  • Season of Anomy (1973)
  • Aké: The Years of Childhood (memoir)

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## 3. Buchi Emecheta

Why important: One of the most influential African feminist novelists; explored migration, patriarchy, and motherhood.
What her work is like:
Direct, accessible realism rooted in autobiographical experience and social critique.
Representative titles

  • Second-Class Citizen (1974)
  • The Joys of Motherhood (1979)
  • The Bride Price (1976)

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## 4. Ben Okri

Why important: Booker Prize winner (1991) and one of the leading figures of African magical realism.
What his work is like:
Lyrical, dreamlike narratives blending folklore, myth, and political allegory.
Representative titles

  • The Famished Road (1991)
  • Songs of Enchantment (1993)
  • Dangerous Love (1996)

***

## 5. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Why important: One of the most internationally influential contemporary Nigerian writers; her novels address feminism, diaspora, and the Biafran war.
What her work is like:
Character-driven literary realism with elegant prose and political awareness.
Representative titles

  • Purple Hibiscus (2003)
  • Half of a Yellow Sun (2006)
  • Americanah (2013)

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## 6. Flora Nwapa

Why important: Widely regarded as the first internationally published Nigerian woman novelist and a pioneer of African women’s writing.
What her work is like:
Focuses on women’s lives in Igbo communities, combining social realism with attention to local traditions.
Representative titles

  • Efuru (1966)
  • Idu (1970)
  • Never Again (1975)

***

## 7. Amos Tutuola

Why important: Early innovator who introduced Yoruba folktales and mythic storytelling to global audiences.
What his work is like:
Fantastical, episodic narratives rooted in oral folklore and surreal imagery.
Representative titles

  • The Palm-Wine Drinkard (1952)
  • My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (1954)

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## 8. Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀

Why important: A leading voice of the younger generation of Nigerian literary writers.
What her work is like:
Psychological realism with strong emotional focus on family, marriage, and social expectations.
Representative titles

  • Stay with Me (2017)
  • A Spell of Good Things (2023)

***

## 9. Helen Oyeyemi

Why important: One of the most stylistically inventive contemporary writers of Nigerian descent.
What her work is like:
Literary fairy-tale reinventions, surreal elements, and complex narrative structures.
Representative titles

  • The Icarus Girl (2005)
  • Boy, Snow, Bird (2014)
  • Gingerbread (2019)

***

## 10. Chris Abani

Why important: A major contemporary literary voice exploring trauma, exile, and identity.
What his work is like:
Poetic, often dark fiction blending political violence with psychological introspection.
Representative titles

  • Graceland (2004)
  • Becoming Abigail (2006)
  • The Secret History of Las Vegas (2014)

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## 11. Chigozie Obioma

Why important: Twice shortlisted for the Booker Prize; a major figure in recent Nigerian literary fiction.
What his work is like:
Epic narratives drawing on Igbo cosmology and tragic classical structures.
Representative titles

  • The Fishermen (2015)
  • An Orchestra of Minorities (2019)

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## 12. Sefi Atta

Why important: A key contemporary literary voice exploring Nigerian middle-class life and gender politics.
What her work is like:
Subtle social realism with humor and strong attention to everyday urban experience.
Representative titles

  • Everything Good Will Come (2005)
  • A Bit of Difference (2012)
  • News from Home (short stories)

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