Mohamed A. Eno
Published: 2012-11
Total Pages: 87
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In these poems, by turns incendiary and lamenting, Mohamed Eno speaks with the force of ancient prophets and the sardonic, onrushing verve of the satirist who leaves no puppet without a head. He is undaunted in his assault and ultimately moving in his calls for a genuine renewal and the sowing of an African earth in which, to quote Aim?? C??saire, ?Çÿthere will be room for all. Prof. Christopher Winks, author of Symbolic Cities in Caribbean Literature Mohamed Enos poems pierce the readers conscience as they move delicately from academic facticity to indignation to lyrical melancholy. Corpses on the Menu: Blood, Bullets and Bones is really a defiant attempt at setting the record straight and through this offers a path toward reconciliation and healing. Dr. Bhakti Shringarpure, Editor-in-Chief of Warscapes Magazine and Prof. of Literature and Post-Colonial Theory at Hunter College, CUNY. What a befitting title! Mohamed Enos Corpses on the Menu: Blood, Bullets and Bones speaks louder than most books on the trends in African history, currently lying idle in many libraries. Thematically, the poems are tough recounts and a courageous synergy between history, literature and literary stylea testimony of realistic literature that questions our ethics and moral values. Rev. Dr. Wangari Mwai, Professor of Literature & Director of the Institute for Research, Science and Technology, Kenyatta University Corpses on the Menu: Blood, Bullets and Bones, by Mohamed A. Eno, is a collection of poems on the topics of slavery, post colonial elites, betrayal of the peasantry, wars, poor governance, and is a must read for all. It aims at creating a citadel of peace in the mind of each individual, and in this way teaches the stakeholders to love and live in peace, justice and harmony and reject oppression and violence. Prof. Monica N.W. Mweseli, Department of Literature, University of Nairobi & former Vice Chancellor of Kiriri Womens University of Science and Technology