Explore Maxyn Edogha's books: Shadows of the Cradle, Veins of Light, and the upcoming Scars of the Beginning. Psychological fiction on motherhood, memory, and transformation.
Shadows of the Cradle
Genre: Contemporary Fiction | Themes: Postpartum depression, inter-generational wisdom, Nigerian motherhood, societal silence
"I thought I was the only one."
Through the inter-generational wisdom of elderly balcony conversations, Shadows of the Cradle confronts the quiet realities surrounding motherhood, trauma, and societal silence inviting readers into spaces where empathy replaces judgment and understanding begins.
What Readers Are Saying:
"A mirror I didn't know I needed." — Early reader, Lagos
"Lucy Edogha's balcony wisdom reached me in London." — Book club member
[Read the First Chapter Free] | [Buy on Shopify] | [Buy on Amazon] | [Buy on Selar] | [Buy on Nuriakenya]
Behind the Book:
Why I wrote this. The research. The conversations that shaped it.
"I did not set out to write a novel about postpartum depression. I set out to write about my mother. And my mother's mother. And the women whose silence I have always felt." [Read the origin story →]
Veins of Light
Genre: Psychological Fantasy | Themes: Ancestral memory, awakening, inherited identity, the mystical
"The psychological meets the supernatural, and ancestral voices find form in glowing veins and haunted houses."
Where memory becomes luminous and identity is inherited through blood and dream, Veins of Light traces the threshold between who we are and who our ancestors need us to become.
[Read the First Chapter Free] | [Buy on Shopify] | [Buy on Amazon] | [Buy on Nuriakenya]
Behind the Book:
The dream that started it. The science of epigenetics. Why fantasy became the only language. [Read the origin story →]
Scars of the Beginning
Genre: Literary Memoir | Themes: Faith, forgiveness, Maternal Sacrifice, Family, Identity Redemption
"He gave me his blood. He did not give me his time. The people who stayed gave me everything."
The Scars of the Beginning is Maxyn Edogha's most personal work — a literary memoir tracing one woman's journey into fullness. Through Naomi's eyes, we witness a childhood shaped not by one life who left, but by the people who stayed: a mother whose courage became a home, a grandmother whose love outlived her heartbeat, and a family God sent when least expected.
From the silence of abandonment to the first honest prayer. From the inheritance of bitterness to the soft arrival of belonging. This is a story about the scars that do not end us and the grace that rewrites who we become.
For every child who grew up in the shadow of absence. For every adult still learning that their worth was never negotiable.
COMING SOON!!!