Adewale Maja-Pearce (born 1953) is an Anglo-Nigerian writer, journalist and literary critic, who is best known for his documentary essays. He is the author of several books, including the memoirs In My Father's Country (1987) and The House My Father Built (2014), several other non-fiction titles and a collection of short stories entitled Loyalties and Other Stories (1986).
Having returned to Nigeria, he lives in Surulere, Lagos, in a house inherited from his father, which he has written about in his 2014 memoir The House My Father Built.[5] Maja-Pearce runs an editorial services agency called Yemaja,[6] as well as a small publishing company, The New Gong.[2][7]
Writing
Maja-Pearce has written in various genres, his early published work featuring short stories drawing on his Nigerian background,[8] with his collection Loyalties and Other Stories appearing in 1986.[9]
Most notable, however, as an essayist, he has written several non-fiction books, including the 2005 Remembering Ken Saro-Wiwa and Other Essays, which in the opinion of critic Uzor Uzoatu "affords us the opportunity of dipping into the immense world of Maja-Pearce as he, in twenty-three heartfelt essays and reviews, illuminates the benighted mores of modern Nigeria, the identity question in South Africa ... and engages with seminal minds across the world. ...This book is a treasure, a profound testament."[10] Maja-Pearce was the editor of Christopher Okigbo's Collected Poems (1986), as well as of anthologies such as The Heinemann Book of African Poetry in English (1990) and Who's Afraid of Wole Soyinka?: Essays on Censorship (1991), and also wrote the 1998 and 1999 annual reports on human rights violations in Nigeria.[2]
His memoirs include 1987's In My Father's Country: A Nigerian Journey and, most recently, The House My Father Built (2014), which the reviewer for the online magazine Bakwa described in the following terms: "a harrowing tale of Nigeria as it then was (1993–1999); a memoir of Adewale Maja-Pearce's quest to possess his birth right, his country and personal dignity. ...Mr Maja-Pearce presents the greatest cast of characters in the history of Nigerian literature. And nothing comes close, no cliché, except you consider Basi and Company by Ken Saro-Wiwa."[11]
Maja-Pearce is married to the artist/activist Juliet Ezenwa.[2][17]
He is the father of two step-daughters, Mandy and Kathy, from a previous relationship, as well as a daughter, Paris Ujunwa Ololade Pearce, with his wife, Juliet Ezenwa Pearce.
In My Father's Country: A Nigerian Journey (William Heinemann, 1987), CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2011, ISBN978-1467913973.
How Many Miles to Babylon? An Essay, Heinemann, 1990, ISBN978-0434441723.
A Mask Dancing: Nigerian Novelists of the Eighties, Hans Zell Publishers, 1992. ISBN978-0905450926.
From Khaki to Agbada: A handbook for the February, 1999 elections in Nigeria, Civil Liberties Organisation, 1999, ISBN978-9783218895.
Remembering Ken Saro-Wiwa and Other Essays, New Gong, 2005, ISBN978-9783842106.
A Peculiar Tragedy: J. P. Clark-Bekederemo and the Beginning of Modern Nigerian Literature in English, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2013, ISBN978-1492184553.