Oi Gets Lost

“Oi is a naughty kitten who lives with his mummy and siblings in an outdoor shed.

Despite mummy’s warnings, Oi tends to wander off and explore.

But one day, after nearly being attacked by a dog, Oi ends up in an unfamiliar neighborhood. And this time, he’s not sure he’ll be able to find his way back home.

Set in Kenya, Oi’s adventure is sure to delight children and cat-lovers alike.”**

There’s an Elephant in My Swimming Poo

“While on holiday at his Grampa’s game farm near the Kruger National Park, eleven-year-old Toby has close encounters with various dangerous wild animals, but worse than that, the most dangerous of all; rhino and elephant poachers!

Toby is adamant to catch the poachers, while his younger and more responsible sister, Tara, makes his mission difficult. With his parents forbidding him to go into the bush, and his sister watching his every move, will Toby be able to stop the poachers?

Harry and the Pangolin

I am the fastest animal in the hills; Harry would say at any opportunity to anyone who crossed his path. Harry challenged Golin to a race; a slow but patient pangolin. This is a tale of a boastful hare and a tactical pangolin.

When Animals Complain

“When Animals Complain” is written to inform children and adults about the individual potentials of animals. By observing animals, man is able to learn a lot of ideas about their abilities hence building ingenious invention.

King of Katunga – A Moral Fable for Modern Times

Rufus, with his childlike innocence, ‘picks’ a rose for his grandma Jocelyn without paying for it. Grandma Jocelyn, torn between love and the need to reprimand, invokes her inner grandma magic and draws Rufus into the magical land of Katunga. This is a tale of a kingdom… A king and his dilemma and the ultimate test… Who wins? What happens next? Does Rufus learn his lesson? In the end it is only the virtue of honesty that leads to victory.

28th The Crossroads

The Accra riots started on 28 February 1948 in Accra, the capital of the then-British colony of the Gold Coast (present-day Ghana). A protest march by unarmed ex-servicemen who were agitating for their benefits as veterans of World War II, who had fought with the Gold Coast Regiment of the Royal West African …