The man who can't be moved
He couldn't be dissuaded from the notion that the love of his life will return to him. No, not at all.
Back to sender! Back to sender!! Back to sender!!!
By
Abidemi
Abudu
He left on a jet plane, not knowing when he would be back again, but that was just half of the story.
By
Shola
Olubunmi
on the inevitability of progress and the uplift meant offered by modernization. The times are moving; time to get on with the times.
By
Adelehin
Ijasan
The man said her Prince Charming would come soon and she’ll be happy forever. What was taking him so long?
By
Abidemi
Abudu
It was just another day at work teeming with dark clouds and crackling lighting and thunders. Oh look, here comes the sun.
By
Shola
Olubunmi
Life was hard but it wasn’t supposed to be like this. Things were better when mother was still with father. Why did she leave? Why couldn’t she just beg father and go back?
By
Abidemi
Abudu
Or how to raise a monster.
By
Abidemi
Abudu
Story, story? Story!!! Once upon a time? Time, time!!! Have you heard the story about the village of Ìlárá-Amòyè and her Odún Orò?
By
Shola
Olubunmi
He couldn't be dissuaded from the notion that the love of his life will return to him. No, not at all.
By
Shola
Olubunmi
Abikus die young, fact. Abikus have to be tethered to the physical realm to prevent them from dying, also a known fact. Why was Yele willfully confronting death?
By
Adelehin
Ijasan
In the face of an inevitable reality, the insane option might be the right one.
By
Abidemi
Abudu
Boy meets ànjònú and the rest, like they always say, is history.
By
Shola
Olubunmi
Two is company and three is a crowd of scalene proportions.
By
Adelehin
Ijasan
A boy and a girl, alone in a room, and all the possibilities contained therein… It was going to be a long night.
By
Shola
Olubunmi
A butterfly flaps its wings in Jalingo and there’s a hurricane in Gbagada. A butterfly flaps its wings in Bariga and there’s a typhoon in Kafanchan.
By
Abidemi
Abudu
How do you solve a conundrum like sapa?
By
Shola
Olubunmi