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The Attitude of Gratitude by Gerald Musyoki Paul
In The Attitude of Gratitude, debut novelist Gerald Musyoki Paul delivers a breathtaking, emotional, and redemptive literary journey that explores the raw power of gratitude amid brutality, betrayal, and brokenness. Spanning orphanhood, abuse, poverty, survival, and spiritual awakening, this is not just a story—it is a reckoning with the soul.
The mysteries of God and Heaven remain beyond human understanding. God can appear anywhere at any moment, unknown to man. Just as He manifested in Europe, so too He revealed Himself in Africa—an idea many find difficult to accept. From the 1920s, God's presence was witnessed in East Africa, traversing the African soil in a black man's skin. Embrace this revelation and seek the deeper truth.
Today we live in a hostile life, many people we stayed together in the same homes are turning against us and even our own blood, families are ready to eliminate some of the people they know and this book tells us much about this erroneous activities around us all the time and distable us.
Love and money has become a common seed of fight together with increase demand of land and therefore many people go to the grave without revealing to us what happened to them or say it but we take it lightly thereafter.
The Broken Chains
By Gerald Musyoki Paul
A courageous girl. A silenced village. A tradition on trial.
In the hills of Enkashe, Kenya, the drums beat loudest before a girl is cut. For generations, this has been the way—celebrated as culture, enforced as honor. But thirteen-year-old Nia hears something different in those drums: not a rhythm of pride, but a warning. As her community prepares her for the traditional rite of passage, Nia faces a choice—conform or flee.
What would you do is a pastor’s wife offered you Ksh 600,000 to kill her husband at a time your landlord is even throwing you out of the house due to rent issues?
When Tumaini is sent to spend time with his grandmother, Gogo, in the forgotten town of Eden, he expects boredom and herbal tea, not a rusted, hidden lift buried in the backyard. But once he discovers it, memories begin to stir—his own, and those belonging to generations before him.
Guided by visions, sketches he didn't draw, and a mysterious woman named Asha—the Keeper of Echoes—Tumaini descends into a city built from memory, loss, and forgotten truths. There, he glimpses the fractured past of his father, Baraka, and uncovers the long-buried silence that shaped their family's pain.
As dreams blur with reality, and ancestral secrets awaken beneath the soil, Tumaini must confront the stories Gogo never told, the diary of Rehema Achieng', and the echoes that refuse to be buried. Some truths are too heavy for silence. Some memories wait to be carried forward.
A spellbinding tale of intergenerational memory, ancestral magic, and the healing power of remembrance, The Ground Beneath Gogo's House is a lyrical journey into the heart of what we inherit—and what we choose to pass on.
Rich in language and style, adventurously told, The Journey Master is a novel about journeys- literal and metaphorical, adventures, savannah-life experiences, decisions, failure and a strong determination to defeat fate.
The story, with overwhelming humour throughout the book, revolves around education set-up making it suitable for learners in all levels of learning, cultural enthusiasts and lovers of adventure.
It employs a lot of creativity and embraces the African art of storytelling. It is therefore ideal for school edition.
Some stories are buried to protect us. Others are buried to silence us. But all of them, eventually, rise.
When fourteen-year-old Nia is sent to live with her grandmother in a quiet rural village, she doesn't expect much, certainly not to stumble upon a crumbling chapel hidden behind fig trees. Inside, a wall of women's names is carved into stone, some worn down, others missing entirely.
As Nia begins to uncover the stories behind those names through ancestral dreams, whispered songs, and her grandmother's fading memories, she's drawn into a history long buried: of women erased, silenced, and renamed.
In confronting her own family's secrets, Nia finds the strength to name what was never meant to be spoken and to give voice to those the world tried to forget.
The Names We Bury is a lyrical and haunting novel about legacy, memory, and the power of sharing memories aloud.
"The Secret Prison" is a profound exploration of the metaphorical prisons that bind human existence, written against the backdrop of Kenyan society. It examines the paradoxical nature of life, where the very elements meant to liberate humanity—be it religion, relationships, societal structures, or personal achievements—often become the chains that restrict us. The narrative delves into the story of Margy and the author, their marriage, and the shared vision that is tested by life’s vicissitudes. Interwoven with personal anecdotes, the book compares modern struggles with the tribulations of St. Paul, highlighting the universal and timeless nature of human suffering.
Nairobi, the vibrant heart of Kenya, pulsates with untapped entrepreneurial opportunities waiting to be discovered. In "Unlock Nairobi's Entrepreneurial Goldmine," embark on a journey through the bustling streets and dynamic markets of Kenya's capital city, where innovation thrives and dreams are transformed into reality.
Gikuyu and Mũmbi had nine daughters, and last of them, Wamũyũ,
decided to stay single with her children and took care of her parents and she was blessed. The Book is about changing our attitudes towards single parents