For the Western publisher reading this: Stop suing African students. Start fixing your distribution chains.
In the sprawling, sun-baked streets of Lagos, a university student named Chidi scrolls through his smartphone, searching for a $100 economics textbook that his lecturer recommended. In a small, bookshop-deprived town in rural Kenya, a hopeful novelist dreams of reading Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s latest work but cannot afford the import fees. In a township near Cape Town, a teacher needs 20 copies of a single poem for tomorrow’s class. b-ok africa book