Journalist Pelu Awofeso celebrates northern Nigeria in new travel book

Winner of the CNN/Multichoice African Journalists Awards (Tourism) Pelu Awofeso has published his fifth travel book titled 9 Degrees North: Backpacking Stories across Nigeria.

An e-Book, it is a collection of 25 stories drawn from his travels in 19 states of the country.

Some of the stories include his visits to Kanta Museum (Kebbi), a ride in the Abuja Metro, an overnight stay in Gusau (Zamfara), a Christmas spent in Markurdi (Benue), and stumbling on the Biafra bunker in Oron (Akwa Ibom).

In addition to these, Awofeso also includes his report on the bi-centennial anniversary of the Sokoto Caliphate in 2004 as well as the 2016 coronation of the current Oba of Benin.

The collection also includes his tour of the Olowo’s ancient palace in Ondo, the Ogunde Living history museum, and walking the monkey-bridges of Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

Two photo-story sections feature the Kambari people (Niger State) and the tomb/mausoleum in Bauchi of Nigeria’s first and only prime minister Tafawa Balewa.

Awofeso said he published this volume to mark the anniversary of his first published travelogue in 1999 and to share some of the most memorable experiences he has had travelling around Nigeria.

“In doing this, I resolved from the onset that I would let the stories lean more towards the northern part of the country where I have had several thrilling moments,” he writes in his introduction to the book.

“On another level, I was very keen to let readers see that part of the country in a fraction of its historical and cultural grandeur, one so very different from the way it is so often portrayed in the media.”

The book is a great collection of fascinating stories and rarely seen images published by Lagos-based Homestead Media and available on Okadabooks and Bambooks.