Harlequin Presents
Harlequin Romance
Harlequin Historical
Harlequin Intrigue
Harlequin Romantic Suspense
Gbogbo e la ka lodun naa loun. All to still end up with koko onirin heart.
Baba Suwe in Masoyinbo would have been absolutely epic. I really enjoyed seeing Okunu on the show, he answered every question with ease, and his spoken Yoruba is impeccable.
This show deserves an international broadcast like WWTBM.
The kindest thing literature does is remind you that your peculiar little feelings have always existed. Someone, in some century, was equally confused by love, bored by society, tired of performing, and hungry for meaning.
You can mock Nigerian girls all you want for lacking communication skills, but the truth is that Nigerian society is generally hostile to honest conversation.
The more Nigerians you deal with, the more you notice a pattern: people avoid saying things directly. They deflect, suppress, and sidestep difficult discussions until, seemingly out of nowhere, there's an emotional outburst.
Many of our siblings, parents, lecturers, bosses, and peers exhibit this trait to varying degrees: avoid, deflect, avoid—then suddenly, get mad.
Your heart is not a state secret. You are meant to declare allegiances. You are meant to have favourites. Write the letter. Miss the train. Stay up until dawn talking. You should be caught red-handed loving something, someone.