A Very Educational Experience

A Very Educational Experience

“I enjoyed your presentation in my class that day. I felt more informed. It was a very educational experience. Thank you.” — Austin T. (A Thank-you e-mail note from a...
What Illuminates Our Similarities

What Illuminates Our Similarities

“I enjoyed this book when I read it, but I have appreciated it more these weeks and months later. I didn’t expect it to stay with me like it has. My first impression was of a nice memoir told in a charming voice for a young audience. As time has passed, many of the simple events and happenings have resonated with me: the food preparation, the experience of the elders like Adjovito, Papa’s work as a logger and his subsequent illness. Also memorable are Kofi’s school experiences: the history lessons on Sundjiata Keita and the Mali Empire, the division of land into Togo, Ghana & Benin, the math tricks, the memorization melodies. What makes the book unique is young Kofi’s point of view juxtaposed against the telling of the real story of a people who struggled but persevered. Because we get the story from the eyes of a boy from 8-13 we are tricked in a good way to digest more of the story. And although the story is deep, it is never brutal; although light, it’s never trivial. That mix is slyly refreshing and stays with you after you read it. And that’s very unique. I would recommend this book because it gives the reader, in a very accessible and manageable volume, the experience of a typical West African childhood that illuminates our similarities through the specific lens of one boy in Togo who loves his family and learned through them to never give up.” — Read on Barnesandnoble and on...
The audiobook released!

The audiobook released!

“…What makes the book unique is young Kofi’s point of view juxtaposed against the telling of the real story of a people who struggled but persevered.” — An amazon review The audiobook of Kofi, a Child of Lavie is now  on Audible, Amazon, and...