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A Criminal Made in Mbeere: The First Born who Failed
0A Criminal Made in Mbeere: The First Born who Failed is a candid account of John Ngari’s life in crime. Written with remorse while on death row, the author traces his journey from the beginnings that led to the many times he was imprisoned and the disastrous impact it had on his life. Often graphic, the book captures what typically goes wrong once a person has ‘tasted’ jail. For some, one could conclude that jail is a ‘college’ that hardens criminals.
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Forbidden Fruits
0The play captures happenings in devolved units in Kenya. Poor governance, mass corruption, and leaders’ amassing of wealth for themselves, is evident. The playwright creates the content anew and makes it sensitive to the society again as these issues have been taken as obvious and normal.
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Guidance and Counselling: A Handbook for Teachers and Students
0The topics covered in the book have been carefully chosen to cater to high schools and beyond, even extending to home environments. The book delves into addressing both the physical and psychological needs of individuals, discussing subjects such as stress, emotions, discipline, peer pressure, HIV/AIDS, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The book thoroughly explores the roles that teachers and support staff play in combating these diseases.
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Jahenda the Teenage Mother
0However, when Alan, a handsome and charming young man, shows interest in her, she is tamed by his allure and falls head over heels in love with him. Yielding to temptations of love, Jahenda finds herself in a quandary.
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Mwangi’s Adventure
0When Mwangi helped a distressed lady change a punctured car tyre one day, he thought it was just that. Little did he know that the token of appreciation that the lady gave him was a trigger that would set him off on an adventure of mixed fortunes.
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Sakagwa Ng’iti: A Kisii Prophet
0Peter Okari Nyambasora’s Sakagwa Ngi’ti, a Kisii Prophet provides some answers to these questions. It traces the emergence of Sakagwa as a prominent player in Gusii of his time, even as he had no formal power accorded by clan, tribe or lineage. Compiled from oral tales, one on one interviews with family members, and written works, the book provides the most authoritative account of Sakagwa yet written.
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Salted with Fire
0Salted with Fire takes place in Kisii on the eve of Kenya’s independence. Central to the story is Dexter Conway, a colonial officer who will be one of the few to remain in Kenya. This suits Conway, who seeks a different life in the newly independent country.
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The Airlift Orphan
0The seed from which this book germinated was from Tom Mboya/Kennedy airlifts which took place in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Dozens of young bright students from Kenya were given a chance to further their education in the United States of America. A Kenyan visionary, politician and trade unionist, Tom Joseph Mboya, had seen that an independent Kenya would need its own well educated citizens to steer the new nation as most of the colonial government workers were leaving.
Kendi, the chief persona in the story, is the daughter of a man who left his pregnant lover behind and failed to come back. The travails that Kendi and her mother go through at the hands of a ruthless society is the gist of the real story.
The story is entirely fictional but primarily based on an historical event which actualy took place. -
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Three Things You Must Desire in Life
0The Desire to Live in Righteousness is a consequence of humankind’s need for spiritual power to do what is virtuous in society. To be righteous requires seeking God continuously even in the face of challenges and distractions.
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Undeterred: A Rural Boy’s Journey to the Pinnacle of Academia
0Prof. Akama grew up in a simple rural African setting in Kenya’s hinterland and was raised by a typical Kenyan peasant family with meagre resources and limited frills. He went through early childhood enculturation and basic education in rural Kenyan schools, characterized by limited educational resources, scant infrastructure, and minimal facilities.
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Wanjiku in Global Development: Everyday Ordinary Women Livelihood Economy in Kenya
0“What I find rich in the book is Mary’s sharp observational and analytical eye that picks up and meaningfully interprets ordinary actions and discussions, placing them in the broader national and global development context, policies and practices.” – Meleckidzedeck Khayesi, Geneva, Switzerland.
“The manuscript is readable and appealing to students in the higher education, community workers, researchers, and policymakers. It is written in a scholarly manner that can be used as a textbook.” – Rose Ann Torres, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of New Brunswick, Saint John, Canada.