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Nigeria:The Birth of Africa’s Greatest Country chronicles the social...
Michael Peel, a correspondent for the financial times has told the...
Ironsi was Nigeria’s first military Head of State. He was killed in...
In a humorous way, Nigerians In Theory tries to depict the full richness...
This House of Oduduwa Must Not Fall represents a quest to share the...
The book contains essays written by four generations of Nigerian...
The Tragedy of Victory: On-the-Spot Account of the Nigeria-Biafra War in...
The migration of races, tribes and ethnic groups across West Africa is a...
The Nigerian Century captures the essence of Nigeria, it's people and...
Bearing both the professional and general readers in mind, Decolonizing...
Democracies can die with a coup d'état - or they can die slowly. This...
The book covers a wide range of topics discussing the Yoruba people of...
Cofounder of the pioneering AI company DeepMind sounds the alarm on the...
The book is collection of speeches and lectures prepared and delivered by the author to diverse and varying audiences over a period of sixteen years.
Supported with personal letters and pictures, Olusegun Obasanjo, Nzeogwu’s close friend and confidant, provides a penetrating and detailed account of the lie of the one of the most enigmatic names in Nigeria’s history.
What follows in this book is the general direction which the military administration in Nigeria pursued from July 1975 to October 1979, a period that marked a watershed and created a significant landmark in the political and socio-economic life of Nigeria.
A former general in the Nigerian army, defence attache to Zimbabwe and member of the Abacha caucus, chronicles the role played by the army in Nigerian history, from the first military coup in 1966 to Obasanjo’s accession to power in 1998.