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When The City Children Came Home
When The City Children Came Home
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When The City Children Came Home

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When The City Children Came Home is the first volume in The Sovereign Soil Saga, a sweeping African epic in which the ancient struggle between land and greed erupts in the red dust of a single Igbo village.In Umuagu, on the scorched plains of Anambra, the sacred Omambala River once ran silver and pure, sustaining generations who spoke to their ancestors through the rustle of yam leaves and the rhythm of rain. But the city arrived in stages,first with survey stakes, then bulldozers, and finally black SUVs carrying children who had forgotten the taste of their mother tongue.Chidiadi Ezekwesili, a powerful director in the Federal Ministry of Works, returns to Umuagu not as a son, but as a conqueror. Draped in white agbada and armed with state contracts, he paves over ancestral graves, poisons the river with failed irrigation schemes, and threatens the sacred Idemili Grove in pursuit of limestone wealth. He arrives with a fractured family: his wife Ifunanya, whose polished Lagos identity begins to crack beneath the village sun; his son Tobechi, hardened by campus politics and privilege; his daughter Zina, fleeing a brutal divorce; and the shadow of his sister Nneka, sold years earlier into a northern marriage and now running home with her daughter before violence claims them both.But Umuagu does not surrender quietly.The village rises through forces the modern world no longer understands. Mazi Onuora, the aging patriarch, speaks in proverbs sharper than steel. The Umuada, daughters of the soil, invoke an ancient protest that brings the village to a standstill. Adamma, the woman dismissed as mad, sings warnings the river itself confirms. And when the great iroko tree,older than memory,falls in a rupture that shakes the earth, the Ajofia masquerade emerges not for spectacle, but for judgment.What begins as a family reckoning becomes a national uprising.As the Nigerian state sends soldiers and armored carriers to crush the resistance, Umuagu fights back with forgotten weapons: women in white carrying sacred palm fronds, students livestreaming truth to the world, rivers that swallow iron, and seeds that refuse to grow for the corrupt. In courtrooms, forests, refugee camps, and sacred shrines, the people of Umuagu transform their suffering into a movement that spreads far beyond their village,reaching the Niger Delta, the Sahel, and ultimately the world stage.At its heart, When The City Children Came Home is a novel about land,and the women treated as if they are land to be owned. It is about betrayal and return, corruption and memory, and the terrible, beautiful truth that the earth never forgets.Charles W.Ochieng' has written more than a novel. He has crafted a political thriller, a spiritual reckoning, and a powerful meditation on belonging in an age of displacement.The city children came with money.The earth asked for soul.This is the story of what happened when the debt came due.Written by Charles W.Ochieng'
ISBN
9798235607071
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
4.5.2026
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  • Epub - Adobe DRM
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