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The Road to the Country

Set in Nigeria in the late 1960s, The Road to the Country is the epic story of a shy, bookish student haunted by long-held guilt who must go to war to free himself. When his younger brother disappears as the country explodes in civil war, Kunle must set out on an impossible rescue mission. Kunle’s search for his brother becomes a journey of atonement that will see him conscripted into the breakaway Biafran army and forced to fight a war he hardly understands, all while navigating the prophecies of a local Seer, he who marks Kunle as an abami eda—one who will die and return to life. The story of a young man seeking redemption in a country on fire, Chigozie Obioma’s novel is an odyssey of brotherhood, love, and unimaginable courage set during one of the most devastating conflicts in the history of Africa. Intertwining myth and realism into a thrilling, inspired, and emotionally powerful novel, The Road to the Country is the masterpiece of Chigozie Obioma, a writer Salman Rushdie calls “a major voice” in literature. Read More.

Nephew

Waiting in the emergency room at Temple University Hospital in North Philadelphia where his eighteen-year-old nephew, Nasir, lay unconscious after being shot nine times, MK Asante began pouring his heart and soul into a series of letters to a beautiful, dying Black boy so full of life. As Nasir fought for survival, MK realized there was so much—too much—that he had kept from his nephew, starting with the truth about his father, MK’s brother, Uzi, whom Nasir had never met. MK could no longer remain silent because in many ways, his nephew was repeating the mistakes of the past. MK began his confessional to repair family bonds—to save Nasir from the same streets that stole his father and to introduce him to the man and family history the young man had never known. The result is this beautiful, poignant, and honest family memoir. Read more.

Featured of the Month

Toi Derricotte’s story is a hero’s journey—a poet earning her way home, to her own commanding powers. “I”: New and Selected Poems shows the reader both the closeness of the enemy and the poet’s inherent courage, inventiveness, and joy. It is a record of one woman’s response to the repressive and fracturing forces around the subjects of race, class, color, gender, and sexuality. Each poem is an act of victory as the author finds her way through repressive forces to speak with beauty and truth. 

This collection features more than thirty new poems as well as selections from five previous collections.

Poet, educator, and memoirist Toi Derricotte has written six collections of poetry, including “I”: New and Selected Poems (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2019), a finalist for the 2019 National Book Awards. She has received numerous honors and awards for her collections of poetry and contributions to literature, including a 2023 Pegasus Award for Service in Poetry, the Academy of American Poets’ 2021 Wallace Stevens Award, and the 2020 Frost Medal from The Poetry Society of America for distinguished lifetime achievement in poetry. More than 1,000 of Derricotte’s poems have been published in magazines and journals. In 1996, Derricotte cofounded Cave Canem, an organization committed to furthering artistic and professional opportunities for Black poets, with poet Cornelius Eady. Derricotte was born in Hamtramck, Michigan, and earned a BA from Wayne State University and an MA in English literature from New York University.