Let me start by acknowledging that I haven't read this particular work. I'm merely expressing my ire at an ignoramus of a reviewer from Philadelphia, who suggested that Soyinka's nobel prize was not well deserved.
There is no doubt that Wole Soyinka is a good writer - his Nobel prize was justly deserved and not a case of affirmative action as another reviewer insultingly suggested. However, someone encountering Soyinka for the first time in this book would not be tempted to try reading his more famous writings: this book is, to be frank, not well written.
I was extremely impressed with Professor Soyinka's argument for reparations not only for Africa, but for all victims of enslavement, colonialism, and oppression. His style may be difficult, but for the able reader it is an excellent introduction to the conditions, both past and present, contributing to the current state of affairs throughout the African continent.
Wole Oguntokun
Wole Soyinka
Wole Soyinka
Wole Soboyejo
Wole Soyinka
E. T. A. Hoffmann
David Marshall Miller
Gary Kamiya
Max Pemberton
David Cooperrider
Shakir Rashaan
C. J. Joachain
Richard A. Deyo
Liz Disley
Jack Churchward
Saraju Mohanty
Frederick Ndabaramiye
Sally K. Fairfax
Jianhua Yao
Engelmann
Harris, Robert A.
Hendrick Ecb Beikirch
J. C. Wells
Thomas 'amarillo Slim' Preston
Charles Todd
Leslie James
Jianjun Miao
Gordon Kerr
Catherine Gunther Kodat
Tamasin Cave
Raymond Mullen
Daniel Pals
Caroline Bithell
Andre C. Willis
Lorna Oakes
Timofey Agarin
Dummett
Rupert Newman
RichardsJack C.
Christian Davenport
David Goodstein
Michael Widmer
Mark A. Benvenuto
Paul Grabhorn
Gerald L. Geison
Amy S. Greenberg
Arthur Groos
Marylin A. Katz
Jonathan Roughgarden
Rhonda Cohen
Jeffrey S. Bland
Simon Wright
Maya Banks
Jennifer Howell
Fabian Meinel
Russ S. Moxley
Beatrix Potter
Michele Wages
Raluca Lucia Cimpean
Ronald Weitzer
Axel Zerdick
Barbara Sahakian
Isabella Wallace
P. G. Wodehouse