• A Life of Vicissitudes (Hardcover)

    These are highlights of heady days and heydays of experiences in a life and its living.  It is a riveting and captivating account of extraordinary happenings to an individual of complex character and disposition with luck and lots of luck. The story is a journey of unmasking the masked. It’s a person’s recollections of life’s vicissitudes as lived by him from earliest experiences, along with insights into student leadership, workings of a military government, chieftaincy, tinges of Akan feminism and writing a newspaper column.

  • Alke-Bulan Duo and Heritage Tales from Santse

    “Alke-Bulan Duo” is an uncommon, classical novel – a historical fictional narrative of the saga of Two Ancient Africans, whose identities and personae were inspired by the intriguing Biblical account of Barabbas and Simeon of Cyrene. The saga of the Two is positioned in the historical settings of the 1st century AD and is recounted by Ataa Forkoyi, the legendary protagonist, to his audience of seven children of the Kerit Kids Klub at a campsite in the Accra Plains of Ghana.
    The novel’s foremost backdrop – an enveloping ambience of settings anchored in the epoch of ancient times and in varying geographical spaces, including Judea, stretching from North-East and North-West Africa (Pelusium, Alexandria, Apollonia and Cyrene), the Sahara Desert, Menroe, Sudan and Ethiopia, is juxtaposed to complementing contexts of explored realities of 19th and 20th centuries’ remarkable natural and cultural heritages of Ghana.
    The plot of the novel is lucid, but subtly woven and couched in varying intricate and intriguing circumstances and contexts that essentially frame the novel, characterized by exquisite historical allusions, sharp satirical inferences, fabulous natural history expositions and architectural analytical references, aligned with profoundly scholarly and philosophical reflections.
    The novel is a literary masterpiece, crafted in a non-pedigreed genre, full of fascinating nuances and spectacles, besides spiking the narration with conscious allusions to the significance of the role of the Black African race in human history, aspersions to the trans-Sahara and trans-Atlantic Slave Trades, employment of the poetic power of dualism, highlighting usage of Latin and Ga words in the text to accentuate the classical and cultural orientation of the novel.
    It is a novel that proclaims a robust and a compelling message of hope for Black African youth and children.

  • Human Resource to Human Capital: The Essence of Population Management

    Through insightful analysis and compelling narratives, Dr Leticia explores how harnessing the potential of every individual within our population is essential for fostering sustainable growth, innovation, and prosperity.

    From empowering marginalized communities to leveraging diverse talents and perspectives, she offers a compelling argument for reimagining our approach in thought, words, attitude and action to population management.

  • Mighty That He Is: Rising above Life’s Challenges

    Mighty That He Is, is a compelling account of a young woman’s journey through severe health challenges starting from a very young age. Keziah Enyan struggled to understand her condition and cope with its effects. The medications she took to manage symptoms had significant physical and emotional effects on her, but her condition did not improve, for 11 long, excruciating years. Throughout this memoir, she shares how she relied on faith and resilience to keep moving forward without giving up. Undeterred by medical advice against it, she persevered through school, enduring the physical pain that wracked her body, driven by a will of steel to pursue her education. Each chapter explores how her health issues influenced her family dynamics and shaped her personal growth. It highlights the support she received from her parents, family, and spiritual mentors, who remained steadfast through every hardship. This memoir captures her painful emotional and spiritual development, molded by the fire of her tribulation. This poignant story weaves together the full spectrum of her day-to-day moments; moments of doubt,moments when faith wavered, moments of glorious communion with God, moments of blessed encouragement and hope, stories of rugged perseverance and hope. Mighty That He Is is far more than a narrative of struggles, it is a living testament to faith, endurance and God’s grace in the midst of adversity. This book in your hands aims to inspire you when you f ace life’s challenges, demonstrating that with faith and perseverance,you too can overcome life’s obstacles!

  • In Attendance: On and Off Campus – A Personal Diary

    In Attendance is the third in a series of autobiographical reflections by Ebow Daniel, who spent a 34-year career at the University of Ghana, the last ten of which saw him as Registrar – a role which, its prominence notwithstanding, he self-deprecatingly describes as bureaucrat, rather than academic; in academia, but not of it; also present at the Academic Board, but does not count for quorum; to be seen, but not heard, neither Present’ nor ‘Absent,’ in the minutes, only ‘In Attendance.’ Forewords generously contributed to In Attendance by H. E. Mrs Agnes Y. Aggrey-Orleans (Retired Diplomat), Kojo Yankah, founder, African University College of Communications (AUCC) and Ivan Addae-Mensah, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry and Former Vice Chancellor of the University of Ghana, provide compelling reason to read this book.

    Following Mr. Registrar, published in 1999 and A Tale of Cape Coast published in 2004, In Attendance is a book of many parts. Beyond the autobiographical insights it provides in its vignettes, it recounts, within well-researched contextual accounts of colonial and post-colonial educational policy, the foundational stories of Adisadel College and the University of Ghana, both alma maters of the author. In Attendance also presents, with liberal doses of the author’s characteristic humour, the author’s educational and professional journey – and people encountered, some in wistful detail – from early days in Sekondi through to his professional life in Legon and to his post retirement life in Kigali, Rwanda; in the Office of President J. A. Kuffuor at the Osu Castle and Jubilee House; and, to final retirement at Another Den, his home in Tema. The author’s reflections on higher education in Ghana, on the political experiment that Ghana is, on religion, on Freemasonry, and on the role of the latter in his life, all presented in a unique style of writing, make for fascinating reading. Foreshadowing his demise in 2019, the titles of final parts of In Attendance – At the Confessional, Homestretch, In Memoriam, Nothing now Remains, Curtain, End of Story and – Final Call belie his humorous depiction of life’s lessons.

  • 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.

     

     

  • All’s Well (Feehi): Living A Life Guided By Grace And Goodness

    All’s Well (Feehi): Living A Life Guided By Grace And Goodness

    The book chronicles the life of a man who rose from humble beginnings to the highest level of academic leadership, illustrating how the Grace and Goodness of God led his life.

    200.00400.00
  • The Stench of Good News: A Story of Faith, Hope and Resilience – PreOrder

    Available from 16th August, 2025

    “AUGUST 11, 2020, BEGAN NORMALLY. BUT BY DAY’S END, MY BODY WAS ON FIRE AND MY LIFE FOREVER CHANGED.”

    What should have been an ordinary afternoon meal turned into a life-altering disaster. Pierre Kuma walked into his kitchen—and straight into a wall of flames. A gas leak had triggered a sudden explosion, leaving him with second-degree burns over nearly half his body and a severe inhalation injury.

    The explosion should have killed him—but God had other plans.

    “The Stench of Good News” is a raw, deeply personal, and powerful testimony of survival, faith, and healing. Over 142 days in the hospital—including four surgeries, twelve blood transfusions, countless setbacks, and a long, painful recovery—Pierre experienced a miracle that cannot be explained by medicine alone. He lives today, fully recovered, leading a “normal life” as if the accident never happened.

    With moving eyewitness accounts and honest reflections, this memoir explores the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual impact of trauma—and the astonishing grace that carried him through.

    This is not just a story about burns and bandages. It’s about divine mercy. About the valleys we walk through. About hope when nothing makes sense.
    If you’ve ever felt like giving up—or wondered whether God still sees you—this book is for you.
    There is no pit so deep that His hand cannot reach in and lift you out.

  • Social Structure of Ghana: A Study in Persistence and Change

    When Social Structure of Ghana was first published in 1981, it became the only comprehensive and sociological attempts to examine the institutional framework of the entire Ghanaian society. It still is. In this 1999 edition, the author updates most of the data on Ghana, and analyses in greater detail some of the issues raised therein. These issues include the military in politics, religious sectarianism, social problems, educational reforms and the world of work, and the shifting loyalties of Ghanaians to kin groups, tribes and the nation.

    As the twentieth century comes to a close, this book probably represents the last major publication on Ghana that analyses the country’s human and material resources for confronting the challenges of the next century.

    The book will continue to be useful for studies in sociology, ethnography, political science, African studies, medical sociology value systems, nursing and social work.

  • Too Much and Never Enough How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man (Hardcover)

    In this revelatory, authoritative portrait of Donald J. Trump and the toxic family that made him, Mary L. Trump, a trained clinical psychologist and Donald’s only niece, shines a bright light on the dark history of their family in order to explain how her uncle became the man who now threatens the world’s health, economic security, and social fabric.

    Mary Trump spent much of her childhood in her grandparents’ large, imposing house in the heart of Queens, New York, where Donald and his four siblings grew up. She describes a nightmare of traumas, destructive relationships, and a tragic combination of neglect and abuse. She explains how specific events and general family patterns created the damaged man who currently occupies the Oval Office, including the strange and harmful relationship between Fred Trump and his two oldest sons, Fred Jr. and Donald.

    A firsthand witness to countless holiday meals and interactions, Mary brings an incisive wit and unexpected humor to sometimes grim, often confounding family events. She recounts in unsparing detail everything from her uncle Donald’s place in the family spotlight and Ivana’s penchant for regifting to her grandmother’s frequent injuries and illnesses and the appalling way Donald, Fred Trump’s favorite son, dismissed and derided him when he began to succumb to Alzheimer’s.

    Numerous pundits, armchair psychologists, and journalists have sought to parse Donald J. Trump’s lethal flaws. Mary L. Trump has the education, insight, and intimate familiarity needed to reveal what makes Donald, and the rest of her clan, tick. She alone can recount this fascinating, unnerving saga, not just because of her insider’s perspective but also because she is the only Trump willing to tell the truth about one of the world’s most powerful and dysfunctional families.

  • The Rise Of Aisha: A Journey from Pain to Power, from Heartbreak to True Love

    From heartbreak to triumph, from betrayal to true love— THE RISE OF AISHA is a story of resilience, redemption, and the power of self-discovery.

    Aisha dedicated fifteen years of her life to a man who never truly saw her. She gave him her heart, her trust, and her dreams—only to be left shattered and abandoned. Lost in heartbreak, she spirals into despair, questioning her worth, her purpose, and whether love was ever meant for her.

    But fate has other plans.

    After a life-altering accident, Aisha wakes up in the care of Kwame—a billionaire tech entrepreneur with a past as complex as hers. He sees beyond her pain, reminding her of the woman she once was—the woman she can become again. As she rebuilds her life, rediscovering her passion for fashion and empowering young women, she finds herself faced with a new challenge: opening her heart to love again.

    Will she let go of the past and embrace the love she deserves?

    Can she trust again without losing herself in the process?

    Or will fear keep her from the happiness she’s always longed for?

    THE RISE OF AISHA is a powerful, emotionally gripping novel about love, second chances, and the journey to self-worth. Perfect for readers who love romantic dramas with strong female leads, emotional depth, and triumphant endings.

    ✔ A love story that heals

    ✔ A journey of success and empowerment

    ✔ An unforgettable heroine who rises from heartbreak to build an empire

     

     

  • RESET: 5 Simple Inspirations to Help You Focus on What Truly Matters

    “RESET” inspires personal transformation through gratitude, purpose, and intentional living. It throws light on simple but very profound facts and secrets you need to incorporate in life to ensure only what matters most, gets your attention. “RESET” emphasizes five inspirations to help you focus on what brings you direction, peace of mind and fulfilment.

  • The Mumfordians: Memories of a Sea Boy

    In one beautiful swoop, this book takes you to the nostalgic past and the aspirational future of an African nation still in the throes of defining self-determination. With the brilliance of powerful recalls, it dissects the socio-cultural as well as the political. It is one man’s journey from an idyllic African fishing village, through his self-improvement to become the executive secretary of a Pan-African body travelling several capitals of the world in the service of his employer.

    It is also a book about people − their history, their dreams and the ills they seem unable to decidedly confront. But what makes The Mumfordians a keepsake is its richness in national promise and communal nostalgia.

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