She had everything except her own man.
he had power. She had success. She had everything except her own man.
In a society that praises independence but still questions a woman’s worth without a ring, A Woman Without a Husband boldly explores the untold emotional journeys of Uganda’s most accomplished women doctors, lawyers, executives, and leaders each one admired in public, but quietly aching in private.
Meet Doreen, a gynecologist with healing hands but an empty bed. Resty, a UN officer left dressed for a wedding that never came. Suzan, stylish and wealthy, but played by love. Barbra, Monica, Noella women who’ve built empires, funded men, swallowed betrayal, and smiled for the world while crumbling behind closed doors.
As they chase love, dodge shame, and wrestle with societal pressure, their stories unfold with heartbreak, humor, strength, and stunning honesty. From fake engagements to spiritual desperation, from public applause to private despair, these women redefine what it means to be whole.
Yet amidst the pain, something beautiful rises: sisterhood. Healing. And the realization that love doesn’t always come wrapped in tradition it sometimes arrives in humility, in self-acceptance, and in the most unexpected places.
Raw. Relatable. Riveting.
Power, Greed, Arrogance & Injustice
From balconies of luxury to the gutters of consequence, The Landlord’s Fate is a deeply moving Ugandan saga about greed, arrogance, justice and the long road to redemption.
Basil Bukenya is a feared landlord in Kampala, commanding an empire built on corruption, cruelty, and the tears of the poor. Alongside his wife Teddy and their entitled adult children, the Bukenyas mock the very people whose suffering funds their lavish lifestyle. Their properties, from the crumbling corridors of Kisenyi to the elite towers of Nakasero, are silent witnesses to decades of injustice.
But empires built on broken backs eventually collapse.
As old tenants rise with new power, a reckoning begins. Courtrooms buzz, media cameras roll, and those once humiliated now stand tall. The Bukenya dynasty spirals from scandal to lawsuits, from eviction threats to criminal charges. As each family member falls from grace, fate forces them to face the very people they once oppressed.
At the heart of the storm is Basil, aging, sick, and finally alone, who must choose whether to defend his pride or confront the ruin he caused and seek forgiveness before it is too late.
Raw. Poignant. Unflinching.
Nightlife, Love, Crime & Temptation
When the sun goes down, Kampala’s real stories rise.
Under the glow of neon lights and the beat of basslines, Kampala After Dark plunges readers into the throbbing pulse of a city that never truly sleeps. From velvet lounges to dingy bottle stores, behind Instagram filters and club walls, lies a gripping world of temptation, power, love and danger.
At the center is Emmanuel Fubzey, a reformed DJ turned nightlife blogger whose posts start to unravel secrets too dark to keep hidden. Around him swirls a cast of unforgettable characters: Marcus Daniel, a magnetic club owner whose empire is built on blood; Dylan Fuube, his brother torn between loyalty and freedom; Rose Namu, a hostess playing both sides of the law; Barbra Tika, the broken beauty chasing love in all the wrong places; and Becky Kisa, a student learning that survival has its price.
Each chapter is a different night, a new lens into the city’s shadow world where every shot taken is either from a camera or a pistol. Behind every laugh is a lie. Behind every dance, a deal. Behind every character, a secret aching to explode.
This isn’t just nightlife. It is life at its edge where police sell silence, influencers push poison, and one viral blog post can set an entire city ablaze.
Kampala After Dark is seductive, suspenseful, and soulfully Ugandan. It is a love letter to the city’s resilience, a warning about its hidden rot, and a tribute to the voices trying to rise above the noise.
When the music fades and the lights go out, what remains is truth. And it doesn’t blink.
Three women. One man. A thousand unspoken emotions.
In the heart of modern Kampala, a wealthy man named Peter Manuels lives what many would call a successful life, a powerful job, three beautiful wives, and children to carry on his name. But behind the gates of his well-furnished compound lies a fragile kingdom built on rivalry, silent wounds, secret yearnings, and a family struggling to breathe under one roof.
Doreen, the elegant and commanding first wife, lives for respect and tradition but hides quiet insecurities behind her strong façade. Resty, the witty second wife, masks her pain with sarcasm while running her own empire in business and motherhood. And Vanessa, the youngest and most emotional, constantly fights to be seen as more than “the last wife” until she becomes the unexpected glue holding everyone together.
From petty arguments and birthday snubs to deep betrayals and unexpected breakdowns, Wives to the Man takes readers on a rollercoaster through the everyday chaos, humor, heartache, and healing of a polygamous family. Through the eyes of their children, especially Mark, the observant teenage son secretly journaling it all, we witness how love can divide, but also how forgiveness can rebuild.
With unforgettable characters, laugh-out-loud moments, and tear-jerking realizations, this novel is a celebration of womanhood, motherhood, African family dynamics, and the messiness of trying to make one home out of many hearts.
Bold. Tender. Hilarious. Healing.
Good Grades, No Connection
Kampala Graduate: Good Grades, No Connection is a raw, riveting, and unfiltered urban novel that captures the harsh realities faced by Uganda’s educated yet unemployed youth. It tells the story of bright, ambitious graduates who step into the world with first-class degrees but find themselves locked out of opportunity because they lack one crucial thing, connections.
Through the eyes of David, a top Business Administration graduate forced to sell ice cream, and his peers Rose the waitress-chef, Phiona the dreamer-turned-politician, Peter the boda-boda-riding law graduate, and Sylvia the betrayed media hopeful, this book uncovers the brutal disconnect between merit and employment in Kampala. Each character represents thousands of young people struggling to survive a system riddled with corruption, nepotism, and exploitation.
It also contrasts their hustle with the lives of the privileged but incompetent Paul, Monica, Esther, and Racheal, who rise to power through family connections, wealth, and scandalous shortcuts, only to fall when truth catches up. Meanwhile, Gulf survivors like Faith and Patrick highlight the pain of chasing dreams abroad and returning home bruised but unbroken.
But this is not just a tale of struggle. It is a powerful narrative of resilience, transformation, and triumph. As the chapters progress, we witness a dramatic shift. The hustlers begin to rise. Business ideas flourish. Forgotten heroes get noticed. The underdogs take the spotlight. In the end, the once-ignored begin to employ those who once looked down on them.
With vivid storytelling, powerful symbolism, and deeply Ugandan settings, Kampala Graduate explores themes of youth unemployment, social injustice, betrayal, mental health, mentorship, politics, and faith, all weaved together with hope and courage.
Whether you are a graduate stuck in limbo, a student wondering what’s next, or a policymaker who needs to see what’s happening beyond boardrooms, this book is your mirror, your voice, and your call to action.
The City and the Fraudsters
Kampala is not for the faint-hearted. It’s a jungle in stilettos, suits, uniforms, wigs, and fake miracles. In this city, survival is an art and deception is the currency.
The Hustlers of Kampala takes you deep into the neon-lit corridors and shadowy corners of Uganda’s capital, where con artists wear cologne and conviction. From high-rise apartments to dingy internet cafés, church altars to forex WhatsApp groups, everyone has a hustle, and no one is truly innocent.
Meet Shafik “Dubai”, the phone-importing charmer with no phones. Tracy “Madam Property”, Kampala’s queen of ghost land deals. Pastor B, the prophet who heals for a price. Natasha, the slay queen who weaponizes beauty and heartbreak. And then there’s Sandra, a once-hopeful university girl turned schemer not out of greed, but survival.
Behind every flashy Instagram post is a debt. Behind every healing miracle is a well-rehearsed lie. Behind every “opportunity” is a trap. While the fraudsters grow rich on dreams and desperation, the city’s victims are left ruined, ashamed or worse.
This is not just a story of crime. It’s a mirror to the system, corrupt cops, fake churches, social media illusions, and an economy that rewards the ruthless. It’s a gripping, high-stakes web of betrayals, cover-ups, confessions, and comebacks told with razor-sharp authenticity and streetwise humor.
For anyone who’s ever been scammed, tempted, or curious about what really goes on behind Kampala’s gloss, this book doesn’t just tell the story. It exposes the whole game.
Praise. Power. Deception.
When miracles sell fast and faith is fragile, what’s holy, and what’s hype?
In the heart of Kampala’s booming miracle movement, crowds gather for healing, prophecy, and hope. But behind the hallelujahs lies a tangled world of spiritual fraud, ancestral forces, broken faith, and a few still clinging to the true light.
At the center stands Prophet Micah Ssentamu, a magnetic preacher whose powers draw thousands but whose “visions” aren’t from God. Around him orbit a cast of seekers and deceivers.
Naome, his loyal admin turned whistleblower. Becky, a worship leader whose voice unlocks terrifying visions. Mugisha, a grieving journalist chasing fraud but stumbling upon real power. Pastor Ruth, battling her past with Nyabingi rituals while leading a quiet revival. And Wamala, a fake miracle actor haunted by the very spirits he once mimicked.
As churches rise and fall, demons manifest, and truth fights to surface, Kampala Gospel takes readers into the blurred lines of faith, fear, and freedom. It is a story of deliverance, deception, and the desperate search for something real in a city where even the altar has secrets.
When the gospel becomes a business, only the truly anointed survive.
THE PASTOR’S FAMILY
They grew up in the church. Now they’re drowning in the streets.
Behind every pulpit lies a family, and behind every holy image, a hidden war. The Pastor’s Family is a gripping Ugandan drama that peels back the polished veneer of a revered household to expose the raw truth pulsing beneath.
In Ntinda, Pastor Solomon Mukisa is a man of the cloth, respected, feared, and admired. But his family, his pride and pulpit testimony, are living dangerously double lives.
By day, they are worship leaders, Sunday school teachers, prayer warriors, and academic prodigies. By night, they run the city’s shadows from escort gigs and stolen cars to underground hacking and gang dealings. As lies mount and secrets choke the walls of their Muyenga home, one explosive night threatens to bring it all crashing down.
At the center is Debbie, the youngest daughter and the last sliver of innocence, whose eyes open just as the masks begin to fall. When blood betrays blood, when faith fails, and when truth finally dares to speak, what is left to believe in.
Blending gritty Kampala street life with the haunting weight of spiritual expectation, The Pastor’s Family is a heart-stopping journey through hypocrisy, hidden wounds, and the fragile hope that even the most broken families can find redemption.
Bold, honest, and unforgiving, this is not just a story about sin and sanctity. It is about what happens when both live under the same roof.
KAMPALA LOVE LETTERS
Because Love Too Has A Journey On These Streets
In the heart of Kampala, beneath the dust, boda horns, city rhythms, and filtered Instagram smiles, are love stories that ache, bloom, collide, and heal.
Kampala Love Letters is a deeply soulful and urban romantic anthology that dances through ten neighborhoods, each a world of its own. From the lakeside secrets of Luzira to the posh illusions of Kololo, from Kamwokya’s gritty charm to Bugolobi’s soft nostalgia, every chapter tells a standalone yet connected tale of real people falling in and out of love on Uganda’s streets.
Meet spoken-word artists, boda riders with poetry in their eyes, student nurses falling for patients, and couples battling filtered perfection. These are stories of quiet heartbreaks, unexpected reunions, forbidden kisses, and late-night truths whispered over street food.
It’s messy, magical, complicated, and real—just like Kampala.
This isn’t just a love letter. It’s many of them, all sealed with dust, hope, and heart.
Life on the streets
Kampala Streets is a raw and deeply moving novel that exposes the unseen life of the city the pain beneath the noise, the hope hidden in struggle, and the silent battles fought on dusty pavements.
At the center of the story is Wamuze Robert, known on the streets as Worms, a boy forced to grow up too fast in a city that rarely offers second chances. His journey through Kampala is one of survival, loss, deception, and resilience. From nights spent in uncertainty to days shaped by hunger, false promises, and exploitation disguised as miracles, Worms’ story reflects the harsh reality faced by many who live on the margins of society.
This novel takes readers into the heart of street life where friendship is fragile, trust is risky, and hope is often the only possession worth holding onto. It explores how desperation makes people vulnerable to manipulation, how poverty blurs moral lines, and how the promise of quick salvation can become a dangerous illusion.
Kampala Streets is not just about hardship; it is also about humanity. It captures moments of laughter in darkness, kindness among the broken, and the quiet determination to rise even when the world seems designed to crush you. Every page paints a vivid picture of Kampala as both a city of dreams and a place where dreams are tested relentlessly.
Honest, emotional, and powerfully written, Kampala Streets invites readers to see the city through different eyes to feel what many live through in silence, and to understand that behind every street child is a story worth hearing.
This is a novel that stays with you long after the final page is turned.
Strong Life is a practical and inspiring guide designed to help readers build a successful, balanced, and purposeful life in a complex world.
Through simple, relatable articles, the book explores essential life themes such as patience, positive thinking, self-belief, leadership, parenting, communication, gratitude, discipline, and resilience. It speaks to real-life challenges failure, procrastination, addiction, fear, and self-doubt offering clarity, encouragement, and direction without unrealistic promises.
Each chapter is crafted to help readers develop a strong mindset, make better decisions, and appreciate life’s challenges as opportunities for growth. From dreaming big and believing in yourself to cultivating confidence, forgiveness, and the power of prayer, Strong Life provides tools for personal growth at every stage of life.
Honest, reflective, and empowering, this book is not about perfection it is about progress. It is a companion for anyone seeking inner strength, wiser thinking, and a more meaningful life.
African Intelligence is a powerful exploration of the wisdom, mindset, and survival knowledge deeply rooted in African life, wisdom that is rarely written yet widely lived through wise sayings well explained to their deep meanings.
This book reveals how Africans think, adapt, endure, and thrive in complex realities shaped by hardship, community, tradition, and resilience. It highlights intelligence beyond classrooms, intelligence found in patience, negotiation, observation, storytelling, silence, faith, and lived experience.
Through reflective insights and real-life perspectives, African Intelligence challenges the idea that intelligence is only academic. It celebrates the mental strength, emotional depth, and problem-solving abilities passed down through generations, from elders to youth and from ancestors to the present.
Honest and thought-provoking, this book invites readers to appreciate African wisdom not as outdated tradition, but as a powerful guide for modern life. It restores pride, identity, and understanding to ways of thinking that have shaped survival, leadership, family, and community for centuries.
African Intelligence is not just a book. It is a reminder that Africa has always known how to think, endure, and rise.
THE LIFE OF MY ANCESTORS.
Yekosofati, Fenekansi, Fulugensio, Mutwalubi, Swaibu, Specioza, Kibwetere, and Matayo
The Life of My Ancestors is more than a collection of stories. It is a living archive of memory, myth, and laughter. Rooted in the oral traditions of Uganda, this book carries the fire of a people whose spirits still whisper in banana plantations, whose truths echo in riddles, and whose courage and humor refuse to be forgotten.
Through ten captivating chapters, we journey into a world where goats interrupt rituals, chiefs weep under the moonlight, and rain dances follow the rhythm of a chicken’s steps. Each ancestor, Yekosofati, Fenekansi, Fulugensio, Mutwalubi, Swaibu, Specioza, Kibwetere, and Matayo, comes alive in tales that blend comedy with mystery, memory with myth, and wisdom with wonder.
This is not a history book in the strictest sense. Instead, it is a celebration of storytelling, a bridge between past and present, and an invitation to laugh, pause, reflect, and remember. It is for the dreamers, the seekers, the children who have ever asked, “Where do we come from?” and for every reader who knows that the past is never dead. It breathes in the wind, the fire, and the soil beneath our feet.
Whether you are Ugandan, African, or simply a lover of timeless tales, The Life of My Ancestors is a journey into the soul of heritage, narrated with warmth, wit, and a touch of the supernatural.