Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Afram Publications

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  • av Kwesi Brew
    218,-

    The collection has many proverbial pieces that bear witness to Kwesi Brew's own experiences. Some of the poetry in this collection seems to envision apocryphal happenings. Brooding storms gather fury, blow themselves out and leave behind an uneasy calm. Also present are poems that share with the reader the impact of the natural environment upon his sensibilities.

  • av Johnson Ametorwo
    257,-

    YAO JOHANNES feels very loved and wanted, yet there is a most painful void in his life which no one is ready to help fill. Who among the bigger Johannes family is his mother? Why doesn't anybody want to talk about his father? These unanswered questions notwithstanding, Yao finds purpose in life and trains as a man of the cloth to serve mankind like his mentor, Father Willems. The whole community is agog with feverish preparations to enjoy the honour that a son of the soil is bringing to them. The excitement is short-lived however, when just before the ordination the carpet is rudely pulled out from under him. Would Yao ever know any happiness?

  • av Pearl Esenam Dumenu
    279,-

  • av Amy Owusua Asiedu
    279,-

  • - Twelve Pedagogical Pieces
    av J H Kwabena Nketia
    355,-

    African Pianism refers to a style of piano music which derives its characteristic idiom from the procedures of African percussion music as exemplified in bell patterns, drumming, xylophone and mbira music. It may use simple or extended rhythmic motifs or the lyricism of traditional songs and even those of African popular music as the basis of its rhythmic phrases. It is open ended as far as the use of tonal materials is concerned expect that it may draw on the modal and cadential characteristics of traditional music. It's harmonic idiom may be tonal, atonal, consonant or dissonant in whole, in part, depending on the preferences of the composer, the mood or impressions he wishes to create or how he chooses to reinforce, heighten or soften the jaggedness of successive percussive attacks. In this respect the African composer does not have to tie himself down to any particular school of writing if his primary aim is to explore the potential of African rhythmic and tonal usages.The pieces in this book were written to give the African piano student something with African rhythmic and tonal flavour that may enrich the experience, shape orientation, sense of timing and coordination of rhythmic and tonal events.

  • av Cnn Lokko
    355 - 387,-

  • - Sequel to the Lost Princess
    av University of Ghana
    355,-

    They say that the path of true love never did run smoothly. Prince Gyakari and Princess Batoma's relationship has entered a fiery phase where their love and loyalties are tested. As with true love, other combatants are always involved. Prince Darkwa of Mrem will try everything he has to separate these two lovers and he has a partner in Princess Afrakoma, who would stop at nothing to do the same. Can their love survive the wicked machinations of this deadly duo? Will another combatant from Gyakari's own royal house, Prince Bonsu, who was willing to eliminate him, succeed in turning the tables on Gyakari in order to win Batoma's love?

  • av Ida Fynn-Thompson
    279,-

    In many African societies, education for the girl-child, no matter how brilliant she may be, is considered a waste of the family's resources. A determined young girl, Ama Ataa, encouraged by a retired school master, fulfils her ambition of getting an education and becoming the first female doctor in her district.

  • - The Saga of an African Princess
    av University of Ghana
    295,-

  • av Bill Marshall
    279,-

    The wind of change had been blowing across the earth's surface for centuries before someone made headlines with the phrase. This wind had been affecting nations, peoples, their attitudes and their ways of thinking; sometimes for the worse, and sometimes, for the better. Perhaps, one might justifiably say that this explains why the human race tends to be caught with its pants down in the matter of development; sometimes very positive, but all too often, far too negative. In every city, there is one area which remains defiantly and stubbornly averse to change or development. One such area in the municipality of Accra is James Town, with Bukom as its centre - the epitome of the black neighbourhood of the old order. Meet Ataa Kojo, who is satisfied to have won a gold tiepin for "twenty-five years of loyal service" to a European trading firm, and his family. At his age, he has not done badly at all. He would be completely satisfied with a modern toilet in his home, but the City Council says he needs a permit to "undertake construction works"… BUKOM was the first novel by Bill Marshall. This novel won the Ghana National Book Award for the young writer in 1979. Over the decades, his writings have been wide and diverse spanning film and television, radio, the press and books. Among his published books are Novels: Brother Man, The Oyster Man, Uncle Blanko's Chair; Plays: Shadows of an Eagle, Stranger to Innocence, Son of Umbele, The Crows and Other Plays, Asana.

  • - Vol 5. Why Tigers and Leopards Do Not Mix and Other Stories
    av Naana J Opoku-Agyemang
    279,-

  • - Vol 4. the Spread of Wisdom and Other Stories
    av Naana J Opoku-Agyemang
    263,-

  • - Vol 3. the Singing Competition and Other Stories
    av Naana J Opoku-Agyemang
    263,-

  • - Vol 2. the Corpse That Laughed and Other Stories
    av Naana J Opoku-Agyemang
    279,-

    Drawn from the oral tradition these tales will appeal to both children and adults everywhere. The stories provide deep insights into human life, with emphasis on the essence of African lifestyles and ways of understanding. 54 folktales in five volumes are in the series all are illustrated in colour.

  • - Vol 1. How Dog's Nose Became Dark and Other Stories
    av Naana J Opoku-Agyeman
    263,-

    Drawn from the oral tradition these tales will appeal to both children and adults everywhere. The stories provide deep insights into human life, with emphasis on the essence of African lifestyles and ways of understanding. 54 folktales in five volumes are in the series all are illustrated in colour.

  • av Efo Kodjo Mawugbe
    403,-

  • av Efo Kodjo Mawugbe
    355,-

    The Prison Graduates was the winning play in the English as a 2nd Language category of the BBC World Service/British Council International Radio Playwriting Competition 2009. The play is a political satire set in Ghana, and talks about serious issues on a light note. It highlights situations in Ghana and Africa as a whole; these include young and energetic people paying huge sums of money to go abroad to seek greener pastures, and the hospitals where 'cash and carry' method is practiced. The situation where churches are corrupt and the congregation is naïve... Efo makes us laugh at our folly, whilst realising that we are all part of the challenges our countries face, and can contribute to the solutions.

  • av Anna Cottrell & Agbotaduah Togbi Kumassah
    279,-

  • av Gheysika a Agambila
    339,-

  • av John B a Agandin
    339,-

    Asuom is to the Builsa, what Ananse is to the Akan. He is the hero of many Builsa tales. His incorrigible mischief and cunning has always amused both the young and the old. In this collection, the reader comes face to face with the crafty creature in his adventures through many aspects of life. From his bullying of Apiuk (the hyena) to his duel with the nightjar (Akalaasing), the reader will find it difficult not to both love and despise the clever Asuom. The sheer magnitude of his wisdom, courage, resourcefulness, enthusiasm, dexterity, cunning and lively devotion to mischief is guaranteed to hold you spellbound through every tale. Nevertheless, even Asuom cannot get away with everything forever! The tales are not only hilarious and entertaining, but teach many useful lessons for life.

  • av Gerald Kithinji
    257,-

  • av Francis Baffour
    371,-

  • av Cnn Lokko
    371,-

    Back to School, the sequel to Trinity High: Students in crime is full of adventure, mischief and fun. It captures the last two terms of the Form One experience for Naa Atswei and her friends. Together the girls figure out how to beat the system and survive in the jungle. Whether they willingly chase some adventures of are drawn in unintentionally. the girls do what they alone do best: they keep readers at the edge of their seats!

  • av Kwei Quartey
    371,-

  • av University of Ghana
    371,-

    Bakoma: Abandoned in a cave as a baby with obscure origins but found by some women. Bakoma grows from a nobody in the palace of Nton, with the kind of beauty kings and princes would die for. She falls in love the heir apparent to the throne, Prince Gyakari, a man she couldn't have. This was a taboo and yet she couldn't help herself. Prince Gyakari: Heir apparent to the Nton throne, tall, handsome, a proven warrior and backed by an immense wealth. He is determined to have Bakoma as his wife even through tradition forbids him to marry a commoner. His inheritance is at stake and though his head warns him to desist, his heart would not let him go. Will these two star crossed lovers ever overcome the obstacle of tradition and be together?

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