MAX LUCADO

Hes one of my favourite authors and one of the non fiction writers I read regularly. I am currently reading one of his 2005 books called  CURE FOR THE COMMON LIFE and I recommend it.

The book is about finding that one thing in life you and no one else are meant to do. Da Vinci painted only one Mona Lisa and God created only one of you.

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The Aireginan Dream on TV



I had my first television appearance today. It was an interview on a program called MORNING LIGHT on Fortune Television anchored by Ajoke Adunbi-David. The focus of the interview was to talk about the reason for The Aireginan Dream.

It was an interesting experience and I particularly valued the interaction with those who called through on the phone.

I appreciate everyone who took the time to watch the program. If there is anything I want you to take away with you is the fact that...

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The Last Ten Percent

I would like to recommend this book for all Single Sassy Sisters. By that I mean all lively vibrant mature independent women on the verge of discovering their life partners. I completed it last week and found it very instructive.

In others areas of life we sometimes need to step back and take stock of our lives to make sure we get a hold of our desires. It is not much different when it comes to issues of the heart. The Last Ten Percent is written by Michelle Mckinney Hammond. Heres her book summary&

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Review of The Aireginan Dream by The Nation's Newspaper

The Aireginan Dream received a nice review from the Nation's newspaper on Sunday 29th October. There's a short excerpt below..

The Aireginan Dream qualifies easily as a classic political novel. The Author employs a breezy writing style that makes reading both exciting and enjoyable. Her amazing use of engajing language encourages participating and intensifies curiousity. But the biggest contribution of the book is

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Review of The Aireginan Dream by Kunle Ajibade (The News Magazine)

To Lift Our Country from the Quicksand

When seers, saints, priests, visionaries and writers set apart a date in their calendars, the dateline is always meant to put a spell on us. Overwhelmed by the intricate web of magical dates, we drape them in clothes of dreams, myths and emotions in order to make them survive. We feed on those dreams to lengthen and strengthen our shadows and realities. In mortal fear of apocalyptic time people have been known to swap their being for nothingness. Many people in this gathering know that the roots of survival of Christianity are very deep in the soil of a terrifying and comforting End-time.

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Review of The Aireginan Dream by Femi Obaweya

As I picked this book, The Aireginan Dream, two things struck me instantly.

One is the curiosity which the title triggered. What dream? But as I perused the novel towards its tail end, I could see the dream, a new dawn, even though the word - Aireginan remained such a strange name.

The second is the sense of aesthetics on the cover. Apart from the beautiful grayish yellow colours that indeed tend to herald the dawn of a new day, the picture of the young lady and her mood which carries an eloquent sobriety tend to give an insight into what to expect in this unique novel.

The author, Dupe Olorunjo divided her novel into three parts with 16 chapters spread over 242 pages.

But first, the Prologue which the writer, uses as a signature tune of politics in Africa. In this succinct fore-runner of the first chapter, the author presents President Jaje, his corrupt cabinet and their preoccupation with how to succeed themselves and how to hand over to their children and cronies.

As the group enter into an occultic blood covenant, the author shows their emptiness and vanity as they rise convinced that their political future and that of their children and even generations unborn were now settled and secured.

Part One of this evocative novel is what the author terms A Glimpse Of Reality. As I read Chapter One of this part, I could tell that a glimpse into Airegin is almost a fair peep into our dear country.

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