img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Tales of Jideofor

Farastein Mokwenye

EPUB
ca. 10,99
Amazon 9,99 € iTunes Thalia.de Weltbild.de Hugendubel Bücher.de ebook.de kobo Osiander Google Books Barnes&Noble bol.com Legimi yourbook.shop Kulturkaufhaus ebooks-center.de
* Affiliatelinks/Werbelinks
Hinweis: Affiliatelinks/Werbelinks
Links auf reinlesen.de sind sogenannte Affiliate-Links. Wenn du auf so einen Affiliate-Link klickst und über diesen Link einkaufst, bekommt reinlesen.de von dem betreffenden Online-Shop oder Anbieter eine Provision. Für dich verändert sich der Preis nicht.

Tamarind Hill Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

Could life be but a dream within a dream?

 

Tales of Jideofor is a work of historical fiction set in the 18th century at the zenith of the transatlantic slave trade. It follows the life of a young lad, Jideofor, from Illah in Western Igbo lands down to Jamaica, through a rich tale of dreams, destiny, love, and reincarnation.

 

In the story, Book 1 of the trilogy, Farastein blurs the lines between fact and fiction, and blends history with mystery seamlessly well, for you to see the truth within the myths of birth and death. Within the pages, you'll experience preserved Western Igbo cultures and beliefs, and life as a Negro slave in the Caribbean, specifically Jamaica. You'll fall in love with Jideofor and MaryJane's brief but beautiful love story. You'll be a witness to the destiny of dreams and how they unfold from birth to death from an African perspective as well as belief in reincarnation. In the end, you might just realize that life is indeed but a dream; that we all are Jideofor, in another face, in another place, living another tale.

 

Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

Transatlantic slavery, where am I from, founder of Òsu Obodo, African perspective, Ifeoma, Where was Nanny of the Maroon from, Nanny Town history, black history of a color, slavery and slaving in african history, lad, Ma azi, origin of Negro, Afrika, slavery of death, Jamaican National Heroes, St John Jamaica, slavery novels, Afrikan, black history saved my life, the transatlantic slave trade, death, Igwe, Tales of Jideofor, slave trade map, slavery love story, West African History, How did Black people come to the west, Nanny, what is ganga, slavery in Jamaica, people who ended slavery, Kingston, Rastafarian, books on Slavery, stolen from Africa, Ukwumege, where are black americans from originally, slavery and the making of america, slave trade profiteers in the western indian ocean, use of marijuana, buffalo soldier, rape of Africa, Port Royal, tales from Africa, mystery, Kingston Jamaica, My Afrika, Caribbean History, ganja, slavery and freedom, birth and death, April 20, slavery in america, village dibia, slavery books, ógbánjè, Origin of the Negro people, African Diaspora, interrace love, MaryJane, Saint Andrew, nigeria tribes, myths about slavery, nigeria book, Jideofor, effects of slavery, Illah, Origin of the Negro race, Iyàsé of Ukwumege, death from an African perspective, people who ended slavery in Jamaica, Nanny town, love and reincarnation, slavery by another name, dream, dream world, Caribbean, how many parishes in Jamaica, Caucasian, Jamaican money, St John, dibia, black history 365, trilogies, Òsu Obodo, Ikweano, Black History, slavery and public history the tough stuff of american memory, Nanny of the Maroon, destiny, love during slavery, slavery by another name by douglas blackmon, Black Lives Matter, molato, 18th century, mullato, slavery at sea, slavery and african ethnicities in the americas restoring the links, trilogy, slavery nonfiction, interrace marriage, marijuana, diokpala, slavery in new york, 18th century Jamaica, negro race, slavery in south america, BLM, herb Jamaican's smoke, Western Igbo lands, black history in its own words, lass, Negro, Rose Hall Great House, Where do Black people come from, Iyàsé, black history books for adults, Chijioke, Western Igbo cultures and beliefs, Bob Marley, West Indies, 18th century Africa, Jideofor and MaryJane, mollato, yellow bone, 1740, historical fiction, slave traders by invitation, British signed treaty with Maroons, reincarnation, zenith of the transatlantic slave trade, Jamaica, slave trade books, black history books, myths about Africa, Oshimili river, West Africa, who started slavery, negro slave, folklore, transatlantic slave trade, Éké, nigeria novels, People stolen from Africa, Oshimili, light-skinned, slavery, Black America