• Red Oak: Ma Yensua Mfantse Learner’s Book 7

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Mfantse teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2020 Common Core Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education for Junior High Schools. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Oral Language (Listening & Speaking), Reading, Writing & Composition and Writing Conventions/Usage.

    The clear and accessible layout and design facilitates learning.

  • Red Oak: Ma Yensua Asante Twi Learner’s Book 8

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Asante Twi teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2020 Common Core Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education for Junior High Schools. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Customs and Institutions, Listening & Speaking, Reading, Language and Usage, Composition Writing and Literature.

    The clear and accessible layout and design facilitates learning.

  • Red Oak: Ma Yensua Asante Twi Learner’s Book 7

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Asante Twi teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2020 Common Core Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education for Junior High Schools. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Customs and Institutions, Listening & Speaking, Reading, Language and Usage, Composition Writing and Literature.

    The clear and accessible layout and design facilitates learning.

  • Red Oak: Ma Yensua Akuapem Twi Learner’s Book 8

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Akuapem Twi teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2020 Common Core Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education for Junior High Schools. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Customs and Institutions, Listening & Speaking, Reading, Language and Usage, Composition Writing and Literature.

    The clear and accessible layout and design facilitates learning.

  • Red Oak: Ma Yensua Akuapem Twi Learner ’s Book 7

    Written and edited by a team of experienced Akuapem Twi teachers and experts, this book is structured on the 2020 Common Core Curriculum issued by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) of the Ministry of Education for Junior High Schools. It comprehensively covers all strands and sub-strands outlined in the curriculum namely: Customs and Institutions, Listening & Speaking, Reading, Language and Usage, Composition Writing and Literature.

    The clear and accessible layout and design facilitates learning.

  • New Currency: A Historical Novella

    New Currency: A Historical Novella celebrates Akan social norms and values, particularly the “wonderful feeling of togetherness” and communal living, uniquely associated with the extended family system and invites the reader to be culturally sensitive and to worry about the Ghanaian culture degradation.

    Apart from capturing the chilling, historical realities of the 1979 demonetisation, it successfully regains and celebrates the otherwise fading, but precious extended family values.

    In the book, the seasoned author chronicles some aspects of the harrowing military rule of 1979, and narrates the ordeal of a woman about to lose an entire lifetime savings. Specifically, it recounts the widespread commotion and hardships associated with the introduction of a new monetary currency in Ghana from March 13–26, 1979.

    The historical novella, set in Sunyani, the Brong-Ahafo regional capital in the same year, captures the widespread public despondency and turbulence associated with the exercise.

    The book provides some insight into the period of the country’s history for adults who lived through the turbulence of 1979 as a necessary reminder; and to the present-day youth some awareness of the happenings then.

    The thrilling lime green-looking book with yellow and white title inscription on the cover, and thinly opaque adinkra symbols – Mpatapo (knot of reconciliation) and Sesa wo suban (change or transform your life), reflects the theme of the book published by Smartline Publishers.

  • Saro

    On a visit to the coast of Marina, Lagos, Siwoolu and his young family are lured by a traitor to a grand merchant ship where they are captured by slaveholders masquerading as traders. On the way to the new world, they are rescued by abolitionists on a British naval ship and sent to Freetown, a haven for freed slaves.

    They settle in their new home, grow their family, and become successful merchants, trading goods between Freetown and Eko. Dotunu, Siwoolu’s wife, falls in love with another man and is caught in a love triangle. But their lives are upended again when they hear that the kingdom has selected the traitor as king. Siwoolu, content with his new life, yet fearful of a curse that lurks in the shadows, refuses to return, but Dotunu is determined to keep the traitor from the throne. She turns to their son, Oșolu, who is running from his own demons, to seize the throne that is rightfully theirs.

    Saro is a multigenerational tale of betrayal and restitution, love and war, inspired by true events that will take the reader from the rocky terrain of Abeokuta and the burgeoning city of Lagos to the lion mountains of Freetown and Hastings of Sierra Leone from the 1830s to the 1850s.

    Saro

    110.00
  • The Runaway Bride (Pacesetters)

    The wedding has been arranged and the guests and the bridegroom are waiting in the Cathedral – but where is the bride?

    What is it that has made life with handsome, wealthy Philip seem impossible after all?

    Pamela has got to get away to find herself, her true vocation and – could it be? – love.

  • The Gun Merchant (Pacesetters)

    ‘Understand, Joe…you must be unscrupulous, otherwise you’ll go hungry. Remember, guns don’t kill, it’s people who kill.’

    So it would seem to the power-crazed Apa, the most unscrupulous man of them all. To him life seems easy, so long as he retains the upper hand.

  • Remember Death (Pacesetters)

    Rango will stop at nothing to make money, live in London, and have a good life. He becomes involved with Laxman, the unscrupulous importer of chemicals, and out-of-date chemicals which will affect the living of thousands of coffee farmers pour into the country. When it seems that they are about to be unmasked, Rango recruits a young factory worker to blow up the Dar es Salaam chemicals factory. Malleko finds himself in an unhappy position. Whatever he does will lead to his death.

  • Sweet Revenge (Pacesetters)

    Ovie’s girlfriend is killed when some new school buildings collapse during a bad storm. He and his four friends decide to avenge her death and devise a bold plan to get even with the building contractors.

    After rigorous training, the friends are ready to perform their ingenious operation which will stun the whole community. Only the impatience and greed of one member of the gang may lead to their downfall and thwart their daring revenge.

  • Too Young to Die (Pacesetters)

    When two young honeymooners arrive in Nairobi, little do the authorities realise they are up against two experts in the world of organised crime. Their job is to steal a precious stone from a Maasai tycoon and they are successful…until events turn against them.

  • Dealers in Death (Pacesetters)

    A grisly trade in kidnapped children leads Paul Okoro into the net of a chillingly cruel villain with a taste for the bizarre — black widow spiders. Paul finds himself in deadly danger with no apparent way out. Can Aimie, his wife or any of his friends find him and his baby son in time or is this the end for the one-legged journalist who has risked himself so often for others?

  • Small Affairs (Pacesetters)

    The lives of Nompumulelo and Lindon are bound together, and it often seems as if they were made for each other. Yet the small affairs of life lead each one into a separate path. Can they be happy apart or will the threads that bind them together prove stronger than anything else?

  • A Fresh Start (Pacesetters)

    Osifo Egie and Ndidi Amerigo meet briefly as teenagers through a family friendship. But they do not like each other and their lives take very different directions. Ndidi is from a wealthy background and is about to leave for England to study. Osifo has not completed his education and is soon to start work as a clerk. By the time fate brings them together again each of them has experienced a great deal. But it seems at first that the unhappiness they have both suffered may keep them apart.

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