Lola Akande (born 3 October 1965) is a Nigerian academic and fiction writer. She has published three novels and a collection of short stories including the award winning What It Takes, and The Truth about Sadia which is endorsed by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

Lola Akande in 2019

Quotes

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Where Are You From? (2018)

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  • What's the difference between a Yanmirin and an animal? Can the offspring of a hen be a duck?
    • Uncle Gboyega questioning Anjola's daughter. Page 247
  • Our father and our God, are ask that you cure Anjola of her Yoruba stubbornness! Our merciful father, we know that Yoruba Stubbornness is a serious disease; it is a disease that is difficult to cure but we trust in your supreme power, oh God, because you are the God of Possibilities.
    • Uncle Cajethan declaring his hatred for Yoruba People. 204
  • Inter-ethnic marriage [I]s a weapon of peace and harmonious co-existence among the numerous ethnic groups in Nigeria.
    • Page 177
  • Don't look at your travails as a north-west problem. It's a national problem. The country needs help.
    • Page 183
  • You are a fresh graduate with little knowledge of the dynamics of your country. The northerners are good people but you've got to be ready to identify with them, demonstrate that you are a part of them, before you can benefit from their kindness[...] You have to claim to be a northerner to get a job in the north.
    • Page 147
  • Is it true that Igbo people in Imo are better than those in Anambra? That they are more hospitable, better organised and generally more elevated?
    • Page 101
  • The Anambra Igbos are not just good, they are far better than the Imo Igbos.The Anambra people are the genuine and authentic Igbos. Besides, look around you, nearly every great Igbo person in this country is from Anambra - Nnamdi Azikiwe, Chinua Achebe, Odumegwu Ojukwu, Emeka Anyoku; the list is long. You have spent close to one year in Anambra and you have tasted their hospitality. What further proof do you need?
    • Page 101
  • When I arrived home... [I] met my mother sitting on the cement slab outside the kitchen door, looking agitated. She said my father had gone out with Ify because Dayo, my immediate elder brother, wanted to make trouble. She said Dayo was categorical in his rejection of Ify because he was Igbo and had threatened to ensure that the marriage never happened... My mother said there was something disturbing about the way he spoke; she said she detected a level of vehemence that was troublesome... Finally, everybody was home and all hell was let loose. Dayo's vituperations astounded me.
    • Page 187
  • I took a firm decision also not to share my misery with any of my mates because I knew what advice most of then would proffer. They would tell me I had no option but to succumb. They would give me a thousand and one names of students, past and present, who had succumbed; that I should be 'realistic'. And so I kept the matter to myself. I was suffering internally; I was going through agony trying to think of a way out. Nonetheless, I managed to maintain a calm exterior as I went about my other academic activities.
    • Page 42
  • there are only two things that 'qualify' an individual to even nurse a political ambition in our country... They are money and the strong backing of a godfather.
    • Page 255
  • When a man is looking... happy..., the woman in his life deserve commendation.
    • Page 124

The Truth About Sadia (2023)

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  • “hellish” to travel to work in the morning and a “nightmare of intractable traffic and bad roads” in the evening
    • Describing infamous lagos traffic. Page 36
  • It was home of the legendary CMS Grammar School, the oldest secondary school in the country, as well as Methodist Boys’ High School. It was also home to some movie stars and music icons like Obesere, Olamide, 9ice and Lil Kesh. Prominent tertiary institutions such as the University of Lagos and the Federal College of Education, Technical were just down the road.
    • Page 36
  • The unfortunate class of homeless Lagosians
    • Describing Oshodi Under Bridge, where some people find refuge.Page 72
  • “‘Oga mi, wole kanle, eleyi gbomo,’” – “My boss, you need to park properly; this passenger has a child with them
    • Page 72
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