Kofi Aidoo

Kofi Aidoo is a Ghanaian writer. He was born in the 1950s at Sagyimase in the Akim Abuakwa Traditional Area of Ghana, where he also began his Elementary Education at Asikwa. The first of nine children born to a senior touring officer at the Ghana Prisons Services; his interests in writing began at a young age writing short stories on his escapades with his father around the country. While studying at Anum Presbyterian Training College, his literary works found their way into the BBC-Africa Service weekly bulletin. He studied journalism part-time at the Ghana Institute of Journalism while working as a teacher in Accra, and published his first work Saworbeng, a collection of eleven stories interspersed with lays to mimic the traditional mode of storytelling.[1][2]

Works

  • Saworben: a collection of short stories, Tema: Ghana Publishing Corporation, 1977
  • Of Men and Ghosts, ISBN 978-9964-1-0342-2, Ghana Publishing Corporation, 1991. Longman, 1994
gollark: Green threads aren't exactly a new idea. Rust has libraries for that.
gollark: Anyway, they should just have added generics. They improve readability by allowing abstraction.
gollark: Sorry, what "power"?
gollark: I disagree with their formatting choices, and besides that, other languages have unofficial formatters you can use for shared stuff.
gollark: Compile on any system for any system: I think lots of stuff does that relatively well.

References

  1. Oyekan Owomoyela, A History of Twentieth-Century African Literatures, p. 39. University of Nebraska Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-8032-8604-7
  2. Richard Rathbone, Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana, Yale University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-300-05504-7, p. 203


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