To be a good writer, always spend more time reading than you spend writing -
Albert Afeso Akanbi
Albert Afeso Akanbi was born in Nigeria
on 31st March, 1982. A writer & filmmaker, he holds a B.Sc. in Economics
from Delta State University, Abraka, a certificate in filmmaking from
High
Definition Film Academy, Abuja, Nigeria
and participated in the 2017 RNTC Media institute in the Netherlands
Persuasive Storytelling and Journalism programme, In this short interview
with Wole Adedoyin, he speaks on his life and writing.
SYNW: WHY DO YOU WRITE?
AAA: I write
because I look at the world around and I feel moved by what I see. There
is much beauty as well as sorrow, so much laughter as well as tears, people
want answers to questions they can't answer themselves, people want to hear the
stories of others so as to know they are not alone in what they are going
through...it is the duty of the scribe, writer or storyteller to make this
happen, we freeze times for future generations, we are the memory of the world,
this awareness is my biggest inspiration for writing.
SYNW: WHICH NOVELISTS DO YOU ADMIRE?
AAA: The list
of novelists or let me say writers that I admire cuts across all genre, cultures,
place and time. For lack of space, I'll mention just a few here: The late Dr
Carl Sagan, Dan Brown, late Chinua Achebe, late Mario Puzo, to mention a
few.
SYNW: DESCRIBE THE ROUTE TO YOUR FIRST NOVEL BEING
PUBLISHED…
AAA: The story
of route to my first publication *Cold Black Night* is an interesting one. Long
story short, I had been writing for a few years, albeit as a young
inexperienced, unpublished youth until I met someone who told me I could
actually go commercial with my writing since the stuffs I had been writing and
giving to friends to read were very interesting. Then I was working with the
private sector, I adhered to the advise, created time and quickly went online
and looked for some publishers, I contacted a few and then Rasmed Publishers in
Ibadan, Oyo State responded, and the rest is history.
SYNW: HOW HAS HAVING A PUBLISHER HELPED YOU?
AAA: For a
young unpublished writer, getting a conventional writing contract signed with a
publisher is like a statement of endorsement because it gives you this feeling
that your work is good enough for it to be considered. In that sense, I think
having a publisher is helpful. Even if your work was stolen, rather than feel
bad, which is normal, you could actually feel a type of joy because it also
proves your work is good for someone to consider stealing it. I once had that
experience...
SYNW: IN WHAT WAYS DO YOU ’SERVICE’ YOUR BOOKS?
AAA: I don't
think I get the meaning of the word "service" correctly, but if it
has to do with promoting ones books and works, I think the use of social media
is one ready and easy to use tool.
SYNW: WHAT ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE TO AN ASPIRING NOVELIST?
AAA: Keep
writing, don't look back, stay focused, believe in yourself, trust in GOD, spend
more time reading than you spend writing...
SYNW: WHAT ARE YOU READING RIGHT NOW? ARE THERE ANY AUTHORS
(LIVING OR DEAD) THAT YOU WOULD NAME AS INFLUENCES?
AAA: I am
currently reading Why We Struck, a story about the first Nigerian coup by
Adebayo Adegboyega, I just finished reading Emeka by Federick Forsyth, a story
about the life of the late Biafran warlord Odumegwu-Ojukwu.
SYNW: WHAT WAS THE BOOK THAT MOST INFLUENCED YOUR LIFE — AND
WHY?*
AAA: The late
Dr Carl Sagan's books, like Broca's Brain which I first read as a teenager, have
really shaped my life. Though a scientist, though an atheist, Carl Sagan's
moral code was light years above that of a great many religious leaders of his
day and today, and they often appear in his works.
SYNW: WHAT ARE YOUR 10 FAVORITE BOOKS —AND WHY?*
AAA: Like I
said, my books cut across different cultures, time and place. Here's a
list.
1. Broca's Brain
2. Pale Blue Dot
3. Cosmos
4. Dragons of Eden
5. Mummurs of Forgotten Ancestors
6. Naked Sun
7. Godfather
8. Things Fall Apart
9. Chariots of the Gods and
10. The Return of the Gods.
These are some of my favourite books
because they show us who we really are and who we should be.
SYNW: FAVORITE FILMS?
Apocalyptic by Mel Gibson.
SYNW: FAVORITE MUSIC?
AAA: I love
Rock n Roll brand of music, the band Coldplay is my favourite band, and currently
my favourite track is Church from their latest album, Everyday Life.
SYNW: IF YOU HAD A BOOK CLUB, WHAT WOULD IT BE READING — AND
WHY?
AAA: Well, we
would be reading books by the aforementioned authors and it's because, such
books speaks to human conscience and are like an awakening agent, and giving
the current situation in Nigeria, I believe we need that.
SYNW: WHAT ARE YOUR FAVORITE BOOKS TO GIVE — AND GET — AS
GIFTS?
AAA: Anything
book on the subject of the philosophical aspect of morality.
SYNW: GIVE US THREE
"GOOD TO KNOW" FACTS ABOUT YOU. BE CREATIVE. TELL US ABOUT THE
INSPIRATION FOR YOUR WRITING.
AAA: I love
truth, I believe in showing care to the next person, and I believe my duty on
Earth is to play my part in making it a better place than I met it.
And this is what inspires my
writing, the need to help as many people as I can understand the reason why I
do this and imbibe them if they can.
SYNW: WHAT ELSE DO YOU WANT YOUR READERS TO KNOW? CONSIDER
HERE YOUR LIKES AND DISLIKES, YOUR INTERESTS AND HOBBIES, YOUR FAVORITE WAYS TO
UNWIND — WHATEVER COMES TO MIND.*
AAA: I believe
everything is said already in the body of this interview but I'd like my
readers to know that, we are called or created to pursue our purpose, love GOD
and neighbour, and leave a mark that will make the world a better place than
they met it, because life is too short for anything less.
SYNW INTERVIEW OF THE MONTH SERIES (FOR THE MONTH OF MAY,
2020)
For more
information about Society of Young Nigerian Writers, kindly send your mail to societyofyoungnigerianwriters@gmail.com
or woleadedoyin@gmail.com or call +2348072673852
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