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  • Gifts That Keep Giving

    Finding your gift is key to finding your place in life. A gift is a notable capacity, talent, endowment, or ability. In a succinct, yet sophisticated manner, this book shows how each of us can unravel and unleash our gifts to make our lives meaningful and impactful. Learn how to identify, develop, use and brand your talent.

  • Between a Rock and a Hard Place

    Life is a trip. We are travellers and we move through diverse seasons, stages, and steps. Drawing from timeless biblical examples and practical wisdom, this book illuminates how our choices shape our destiny. In this book, you’ll find valuable guidance on aligning your decisions with your purpose and values. With actionable advice on planning and breaking down ambitions into achievable steps, this book is a must-read for anyone seeking to navigate life’s complex decisions with clarity and confidence.

  • Building the Platform Play for Ghana: The Reflections

    Many can share stories about the innovation in the Ghanaian market in the past decade but few can do this from a front-row seat. Eric was present through some major inflexion points in digital services like mobile money. He is one of the key agents of digital transformation in Ghana. Relax and read as Eric shares from his priceless experience leading top Telco and Enterprise businesses driving this change. – Jane Egerton-Idehen, MD-CEO, NIGCOMSAT, Nigeria

  • The Misleading Leaders: The Ws and H of Deceptive Authorities

    This book expounds the facets of knavishness, particularly, witting and unwitting deception, their causes, and consequences.

    It provides a brief overview of who leaders and authorities are, and some instances of their categorisations.

    Additionally, it lays bare primary misleaders, providing examples of their methods and the harmful intentions of misguiding their contemporaries, subordinates, acolytes, and followers.

    Given the characteristic traits of slyboots, the book elucidates the virtues of honesty and integrity for anyone in a leadership position, as well as for contemporaries or followers.

    Finally, it exposits practical solutions for counteracting dishonesty and avoiding the traps set by those who seek to manipulate others.

     

  • Revolution and Democracy in Ghana: The Politics of Jerry Rawlings

    Flight-Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings, who passed away on 12 November 2020, aged 73 years, dramatically appeared on Ghana’s political scene 40 years earlier. In May 1979, Rawlings was briefly jailed following an unsuccessful coup attempt. Rawlings and his comrades were revolted by Ghana’s corruption and economic decline at the hands of its ruling generals. A few weeks later, on 4 June 1979, Rawlings was released from prison by a group of disgruntled soldiers and took power following a successful coup d’état. Following a brief, but turbulent, few months in power, Rawlings’ Armed Forces Revolutionary Council handed over to an elected government in September 1979. Twenty-seven months later, on 31 December 1981, he was back in power, again by coup d’état. This time it was not a brief stay in the hot seat: Rawlings, leader of the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC), comprising three civilians and three armed forces personnel, remained in power for more than a decade. Seeking to justify the coup, Rawlings claimed that the PNDC was a necessary response to Ghana’s political and economic crisis. In January 1993, democracy returned to Ghana. Jerry Rawlings was popularly elected president twice, eventually standing down in January 2001, as the 1992 constitution demanded. Beginning his political career as a military figure with revolutionary aspirations, Rawlings ended it as a twice democratically-elected civilian president.

    These are the brief facts about the political career of Flight-Lieutenant, later President, Jerry Rawlings. More than three years after his passing, Rawlings remains a pivotal, absolutely central, figure in Ghana. His enduring influence in Ghana may be second only to that of Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah. On the other hand, there is no more controversial figure in Ghana’s political and economic history than Rawlings. More than two decades after he left political office, nothing divides Ghanaians more than their opinions regarding him. This book seeks to explain how and why Rawlings and the PNDC progressed from an undemocratic military-based regime to laying the foundations for Ghana’s three decades of multi-party democracy. Was Rawlings a patriot who believed passionately in Ghana and did all he could to make the country succeed? Or was he a wrecker who wanted to bring the post-colonial edifice tumbling down in a misguided attempt at revolution? The aim of this book is to enable the reader to draw their own conclusions on these questions.

     

     

  • Financial Evangelism (Hardcover)

    One of the primary challenges the church faces today is securing the finances needed to spread the message of the kingdom to the ends of the earth. The issue with missions has never been a lack of willing individuals but rather a shortage of financial resources to reach the unsaved.

    This is the motivation behind the book: Financial Evangelism.

    In this book, bestselling authors and Christian Business Coaches, Nelson and Elizabeth, guide you through the process of finding the necessary funds and developing the heart to finance evangelism and missions work. For believers seeking ways to create wealth to advance the kingdom, Financial Evangelism will be an invaluable companion. Entrepreneurs and professionals in the marketplace will also find this book a valuable resource.

     

  • EBO ACQUAH: The True Life Story of a Man Born to Serve

    This memoir-style book tells the inspiring story of an ordinary man with an extraordinary purpose. Born with a strong sense of compassion and duty, the protagonist dedicates his life to serving others.

    The book chronicles his journey: Early life experiences shaping his selfless nature, Transformative moments that solidify his commitment to service, Challenges faced while pursuing his passion & Triumphs and lessons learned from helping others.

    Through heartfelt storytelling, the author shares valuable lessons on: Embracing one’s purpose, Overcoming obstacles & Finding fulfillment in serving others.

    This uplifting true story motivates readers to reevaluate their own life’s purpose and encourages them to make a positive impact, especially through Service.

     

  • Women Marrying Women in Northern Ghana: Wading into the Homosexuality Debate from a Ghanaian Perspective

    When the late Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe, vehemently insisted that homosexuality is un-African, many scholars and commenters from around the world disagreed with him and went on to cite many cultural practices in certain African societies signifying the presence or traces of homosexual activities in African societies. Among many of these cultural practices often cited is the practice of women marrying women as evidence of female homosexual traits and, therefore evidence of homosexuality embedded in certain cultures in Africa.

    The Frafras of the Upper East Region of Ghana are a prominent ethnic group that practice this cultural arrangement. Delving into the the practice from the Frafra context, the books documents the practice of women to women marriage and its relationship or otherwise with homosexuality, with an explanation for the strong resistance of Ghana to homosexuality

     

  • Who am I? Exploring the Concepts of Gender and Identity from the Frafra Perspective

    In a world where many seem unsure of who they are, the concepts of gender and identity are prime for discussion. Yet through my years of study of the subject of identity, I have come to realise the definition of identity is so vague it can pass for whatever you wish it to be. If anything, it has become more difficult for people to define themselves, making it look as though the customary (re)sources for and of identity formation are no longer as direct or straightforward as before, particularly in the face of globalisation and modernisation, or identity has become self mutating. So, I ask, how can we easily describe who we are and more importantly, how can we defend that understanding?

    Perhaps a cultural perspective to the concepts could offer more insights. In this book, I adopt a culturally contextual framework of description to gender and identity as it relates to the Frafras of Northern Ghana.

     

     

  • The Adventures of Hawa and Kofi

    In this hilarious novella, two teenagers have to navigate the challenges of their lives and the influence of family and friends. But each experience teaches a lesson, and in the end, amor vincit omnia.

  • The Pied Piper and Other Tales: An African Retelling

    Over the years, parents and teachers have complained about African children reading European fairy tales that do not reflect their culture. It is for this reason that I have done a strike-through in the European title of the story of the girl and the seven dwarfs. These European tales, a patrimony of mankind, have been retold to help assuage these cultural concerns.

  • Under The Light

    ‘Under the Light’ is a collection of writings by Franka-Maria Andoh.

    The collection covers entrepreneurship, spirituality, life’s lessons, and the grace filled 25-year journey she has embarked on as the business owner of Josie’s Cuppa Cappuccino.

     

    Under The Light

    115.00
  • Bolga By Bus

    A teenager sets on a long journey to find his father who abandoned his mother more than nine years ago. His journey takes him through the cultural and physical landscape of Ghana. He finally meets his uncle and grandmother. This meeting changes his life.

    Bolga By Bus

    50.00
  • Emigrant

    The unquenchable desire of every young Ghanaian man is to have regular delicious sex and to get a visa to a European or North American country. He would pray fervently to God so long as He owes him his wants. But if enemy spirits, like a dictatorial father, deny him the chance to leave Ghana, he would stay, fleece the country, have more sex, and watch European football. For these desires, he’d make a fetish of the church or the mosque. Joseph Adenera Akolgo was one such young man.

    Emigrant

    70.00
  • Cinderella and Other Tales: An African Retelling

    Over the years, Parents and Teachers have complained about African children reading European fairy tales that do not reflect their culture. These European tales, A Patrimony of mankind, have been retold to help assuage these concerns.

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