Black Gods



Black Gods
By Femi Ojo-Ade

Issued:   2002
Format:   Paperback
ISBN:   0-9828864-4-0

Price: $14.95 -


Black Gods uses fiction to define and discuss the dilemma of Africa's daughters and sons caught in the belly of the colonial and neocolonial predators. In his usual thought-provoking and caustic manner, Ojo-Ade presents characters who are trying to survive in the ball of confusion called the global village, a world where racism and other internalizing myths that dehumanize them, in the name of Civilization

About the author: Formerly Professor and Head of Department of Foreign Languages at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria, FEMI OJO-ADE is currently Professor at St. Mary's College of Maryland, USA, where he has been pioneer Coordinator of the African and African Diaspora Studies Program. An internationally recognized scholar of Black Literatures and Cultures, Ojo-Ade is also an award-winning creative writer. In addition to many articles and essays, he has published eighteen books of criticism, fiction, and poetry. The long list includes

In addition to many articles and essays, he has published eighteen books of criticism, fiction, and poetry. The long list includes:

  • A. critical texts: ON BLACK CULTURE; BEING BLACK, BEING HUMAN; DEATH OF A MYTH: CRITICAL ESSAYS ON NIGERIA; KEN SARO-WIWA, A BIO-CRITICAL STUDY; LEON-GONTRAN DAMAS.
  • B. fiction: HOME, SWEET, SWEET HOME (translated into Brazilian Portuguese as MAMA AFRICA); DEAD END; BLACK GODS; ONE LITTLE GIRL'S DREAMS.
  • C. poetry: EXILE AT HOME.
  • D. Ojo-Ade writes in several languages, including his native Yoruba, Englich, French, Portuguese, and Spanish. His first novel in French, LES PARADIS TERRESTRES, was recently co-published by African Heritage Press and Amoge Press.


More information on this writer may be obtaine at: http://www.smcm.edu

His creative works include:

  • Dead End (2001)
  • The Almond Tree (2000)
  • Exile At Home (1998) (Honorable mention 1999 Association of Nigerian Authors/Cadbury prize for Poetry)
  • Ken Saro-Wiwa: A Bio-Critical Study (1999)
  • Black Gods (2002)
  • One Little Girl’s Dream (wins Association of Nigerian Authors’ Prize for children’s Literature in 1999)
  • Home Sweet Sweet Home (Translated into Portuguese)
  • Death of a Myth: Critical Essays on Nigeria, Les Paradis Terrestres ( French 2003)

Black Gods