Blog tour: How To Speak Punjabi in Brampton
Welcome to the blog tour for How To Speak Punjabi in Brampton by Onyeka Nwelue!
Being familiar with this author, I was looking forward to reading his latest novel. Sadly, my copy didn’t reach me in time. Below you’ll find more details about the book. What do you think? Is this something that piques your interest too?
More about the book…
Balminder Jagvir Singh had perfected the art of juggling.
Every morning, Balminder, a tall, slightly round man in his early thirties with a perpetual twinkle in his eye, wakes up to the melodious strains of his mother's early morning prayers playing on his phone, mingling with the distant roar of the city of Brampton coming to life.
Brampton, a city with a rich fabric of different cultures, became home to Balminder just a few years ago.
His move from India to Canada had been filled with the usual immigrant anxieties and aspirations, but he has taken it in his stride, bringing with him a vibrant slice of Punjabi culture to his suburban neighbourhood.
What happens when his aged parents and his arranged bride visit Canada?
More about the author…
Onyeka Nwelue is a Nigerian scholar, filmmaker, jazz musician and publisher, who has published over 30 books, the most popular being the Crime Fiction Lovers’ Awards-winning The Strangers of Braamfontein, described by Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, as ‘raunchy.’
Nwelue was an Academic Visitor to the University of Oxford and Visiting Scholar in the University of Cambridge.
He was a Visiting Research Fellow at Ohio University and a Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg.
In 2024, his biopic of Emeka Ojukwu, Other Side of History, was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Nwelue is the director of Africa Center Mexico.
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